4.7 Article

Assessing the impact of aircraft arrival on ambient ultrafine particle number concentrations in near-airport communities in Boston, Massachusetts

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 225, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2023.115584

Keywords

Air pollution; Aviation; Source attribution; Ultrafine particles

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Aircraft emissions, especially during arrival periods, contribute to elevated levels of ultrafine particle concentration (PNC) in communities near airports. This study evaluated the impact of arrival aircraft on PNC across six study sites near Boston Logan International Airport. The findings showed that PNC was higher at sites closer to the airport and during hours with high aircraft activity, with arrival aircraft accounting for up to 50% of the total PNC at the nearest monitoring site. This highlights the intermittent but significant contributions of arrival aircraft to ambient PNC.
Aircraft emissions contribute to overall ambient air pollution, including ultrafine particle (UFP) concentrations. However, accurately ascertaining aviation contributions to UFP is challenging due to high spatiotemporal variability along with intermittent aviation emissions. The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of arrival aircraft on particle number concentration (PNC), a proxy for UFP, across six study sites 3-17 km from a major arrival aircraft flight path into Boston Logan International Airport by utilizing real-time aircraft activity and meteorological data. Ambient PNC at all monitoring sites was similar at the median but had greater variation at the 95th and 99th percentiles with more than two-fold increases in PNC observed at sites closer to the airport. PNC was elevated during the hours with high aircraft activity with sites closest to the airport exhibiting stronger signals when downwind from the airport. Regression models indicated that the number of arrival aircraft per hour was associated with measured PNC at all six sites, with a maximum contribution of 50% of total PNC at a monitor 3 km from the airport during hours with arrival activity on the flight path of interest (26% across all hours). Our findings suggest strong but intermittent contributions from arrival aircraft to ambient PNC in communities near airports.

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