4.8 Article

Impact of Mobile Monitoring Network Design on Air Pollution Exposure Assessment Models

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
卷 57, 期 1, 页码 440-450

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c05338

关键词

mobile monitoring; air pollution; ultrafine particles; environmental monitoring; exposure assessment; prediction models

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Short-term mobile monitoring campaigns are increasingly used in epidemiology to evaluate long-term air pollution exposure. However, the impact of monitoring network design features on exposure assessment models is not well understood. This study utilized an extensive mobile monitoring campaign in the greater Seattle area to investigate the influence of the number of stops and sampling temporality on exposure assessment models. The findings highlight the importance of carefully considering monitoring designs for mobile monitoring campaigns aiming to assess long-term exposure.
Short-term mobile monitoring campaigns are increasingly used to assess long-term air pollution exposure in epidemiology. Little is known about how monitoring network design features, including the number of stops and sampling temporality, impacts exposure assessment models. We address this gap by leveraging an extensive mobile monitoring campaign conducted in the greater Seattle area over the course of a year during all days of the week and most hours. The campaign measured total particle number concentration (PNC; sheds light on ultrafine particulate (UFP) number concentration), black carbon (BC), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), fine particulate matter (PM2.5), and carbon dioxide (CO2). In Monte Carlo sampling of 7327 total stops (278 sites x 26 visits each), we restricted the number of sites and visits used to estimate annual averages. Predictions from the all-data campaign performed well, with cross-validated R2s of 0.51-0.77. We found similar model performances (85% of the all-data campaign R2) with similar to 1000 to 3000 randomly selected stops for NO2, PNC, and BC, and similar to 4000 to 5000 stops for PM2.5 and CO2. Campaigns with additional temporal restrictions (e.g., business hours, rush hours, weekdays, or fewer seasons) had reduced model performances and different spatial surfaces. Mobile monitoring campaigns wanting to assess long-term exposure should carefully consider their monitoring designs.

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