4.7 Article

Assessing the role of atmospheric dispersion vs. emission strength in the southern Po Valley (Italy) using dispersion-normalised multi-time receptor modelling

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT
Volume 316, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2023.120168

Keywords

Atmospheric stability; Pollution hotspot; Source apportionment; PM1; Different time resolution; Ventilation coefficient

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In this paper, the DN-PMF approach was applied to analyze the relative importance of emission strength vs. atmospheric dispersion conditions, providing a more realistic picture of pollution in areas like the Po Valley. The results showed that the diel modulation of PM1 emissions from certain sources was masked by the variability of the mixing layer, highlighting the need for appropriate abatement strategies.
In this paper, we applied the Dispersion Normalised Positive Matrix Factorisation (DN-PMF) approach recently proposed in the literature to provide a more realistic picture of the relative importance of emission strength vs. atmospheric dispersion conditions. The disentanglement of such effects is of great concern in pollution hot spots like the Po Valley (Italy), where particulate matter limit values are exceeded despite the existing abatement measures. To explore the potentiality of the DN-PMF approach - still scarcely applied in the literature - a well -chemically characterised PM1 (atmospheric particles with aerodynamic diameter <1 mu m) dataset comprising samples collected at different time resolutions at an urban background site (Bologna) in the southern Po Valley was used. Indeed, it is well known that shallow mixing layers promote pollutant accumulation but this obser-vation is not enough to exclude an enhancement of emission strength which could be tackled by appropriate abatement strategies.The source apportionment of sub-micron sized aerosols having a quite long atmospheric residence time in a complex environment like the Po Valley -which is also strongly impacted by secondary aerosol formation on a basin-scale -is generally quite challenging when using receptor models. Due to the availability of a huge dataset with variables having multiple time resolutions, in this work the DN-PMF was implemented in a multi-time resolution approach (MT) to achieve a better source identification and to gain knowledge about the relative importance of atmospheric dilution vs. emissions. A comparison between results obtained by the application of the regular multi time resolution (REG-MT) vs. the DN-MT approach is presented here for the five factors identified (nitrate-dominated, sulphate-dominated, biomass burning, mineral dust, and urban aerosol). The first interesting outcome is that REG-MT and DN-MT results do not point at significant differences in temporal pat-terns for aerosol components and sources impacting at the basin-scale (i.e. sulphate-and nitrate-dominated aerosol, biomass burning) thus suggesting that the diel modulation of these PM1 emissions is somehow masked by the stronger variability of the mixing layer. Conversely, contributions from local sources with more pronounced diel variation like traffic are quite well reproduced by DN-MT and the ambient concentrations are enhanced compared to REG-MT. This is an important piece of information highlighting that PM1 concentrations from local sources have been likely underestimated by REG-MT assessments.To our knowledge, this is one of the very few applications of DN-MT and the first one at a European site where the huge effort made to implement air pollution containment measures is still not very much effective in reducing PM levels; moreover, in this paper a detailed discussion about the possible interpretation of the output of DN-MT in terms of temporal patterns is reported.

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