A spatiotemporal land-use regression model of winter fine particulate levels in residential neighbourhoods

被引:0
|
作者
Audrey Smargiassi
Allan Brand
Michel Fournier
François Tessier
Sophie Goudreau
Jacques Rousseau
Mario Benjamin
机构
[1] Chaire sur la pollution de l’air,Département de santé environnementale et de santé au travail
[2] les changements climatiques et la santé,undefined
[3] Université de Montréal,undefined
[4] Institut National de Santé Publique du Québec,undefined
[5] Université de Montréal,undefined
[6] Direction de Santé Publique de l’Agence de la Santé et des Services Sociaux de Montréal,undefined
[7] Environnement Canada,undefined
来源
Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology | 2012年 / 22卷
关键词
fine particles; wood burning; land-use regression; property assessment data;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Residential wood burning can be a significant wintertime source of ambient fine particles in urban and suburban areas. We developed a statistical model to predict minute (min) levels of particles with median diameter of <1 μm (PM1) from mobile monitoring on evenings of winter weekends at different residential locations in Quebec, Canada, considering wood burning emissions. The 6 s PM1 levels were concurrently measured on 10 preselected routes travelled 3 to 24 times during the winters of 2008–2009 and 2009–2010 by vehicles equipped with a GRIMM or a dataRAM sampler and a Global Positioning System device. Route-specific and global land-use regression (LUR) models were developed using the following spatial and temporal covariates to predict 1-min-averaged PM1 levels: chimney density from property assessment data at sampling locations, PM2.5 “regional background” levels of particles with median diameter of <2.5 μm (PM2.5) and temperature and wind speed at hour of sampling, elevation at sampling locations and day of the week. In the various routes travelled, between 49% and 94% of the variability in PM1 levels was explained by the selected covariates. The effect of chimney density was not negligible in “cottage areas.” The R2 for the global model including all routes was 0.40. This LUR is the first to predict PM1 levels in both space and time with consideration of the effects of wood burning emissions. We show that the influence of chimney density, a proxy for wood burning emissions, varies by regions and that a global model cannot be used to predict PM in regions that were not measured. Future work should consider using both survey data on wood burning intensity and information from numerical air quality forecast models, in LUR models, to improve the generalisation of the prediction of fine particulate levels.
引用
收藏
页码:331 / 338
页数:7
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