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    A model study of the impact of vehicle density and speed on the concentrations of submicron particles in the urban atmosphere in Hangzhou

    169930_169930.pdf (24.74Kb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Jian, Le
    Zhao, Yun
    Zhu, P.
    Date
    2011
    Type
    Conference Paper
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Jian, Le and Zhao, Yun and Zhu, Ping. 2011. A model study of the impact of vehicle density and speed on the concentrations of submicron particles in the urban atmosphere in Hangzhou, The 43rd APACPH Conference, Oct 20 2011, pp. 1. Seoul, South Korea: Asia-Pacific Academic Consortium for Public Health (APACPH).
    Source Title
    The 43rd APACPH Conference (Asia-Pacific Acadmic Consortium for Public Health)
    Source Conference
    The 43rd APACPH 2011 Conference
    School
    School of Public Health
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/35720
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    Studies focused on the impact of vehicle density and driving speed on the concentrations of submicron particles in the atmosphere are rare. As the majority of submicron particles in the atmosphere come from combustion emissions, it is important to understand the contributions to this problem made by vehicle factors such as vehicle density and driving speed. In order to investigate the impact of vehicle density and speed on the concentrations of submicron particles in the atmosphere, a study was conducted in Hangzhou, a city in Southeast China. Results showed that the average ultrafine particle (UFP) concentration was 45805 particles cm-3 and the average concentration of particulate matter 1.0 (PM1.0) was 217μg m-3 during the survey period. An autoregressive integrated moving average modelling results indicated that the increase of UFP and PM1.0 concentrations in the atmosphere correlated positively (P<0.05) with the increase of vehicle density and driving speed, implying that vehicle density and driving speed are significant predictors of submicron particles emission. This study provides first hand information for future studies on the submicron particle emissions in Hangzhou, a city with rapidly increasing vehicle numbers. The results will also assist in further investigation of any causal relationship between submicron particles and the health of local residents.

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