NERL Research Abstract

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APM #521

Significant Research Findings

New Particulate Matter2 5 Profiles for
Mobile Source Emissions

Scientific Emissions from motor vehicles have been identified as a major contributor to

Problem and ambient particulate matter (PM) and other pollutant concentrations in U.S.

Policy Issues

J	urban areas. Consequently, for many years motor vehicles have been a major

target for regulations and control technologies aimed at reducing their
emissions. As measured by mobile source emissions inventories, these efforts
have resulted in significant improvements, in spite of substantial increases in
VMT (vehicle miles traveled) over the same period. The difficulties of
constructing accurate emissions inventories are well known, however, and it is
important to provide alternative means of verifying and quantifying changes in
the contributions of mobile source emissions to current air quality. Receptor
modeling can perform this function by utilizing the measured atmospheric
concentrations of mobile source-tracing chemical species and comparing their
concentrations to the relative abundances (source profiles) of the species found
in mobile source emissions. This project's objective was to provide an up-to-
date set of source profiles for light-duty gasoline and heavy-duty diesel
vehicles.

One of the standard methods used to obtain mobile source profiles is to take
measurements in motor vehicle tunnels. In this study, measurements were
taken in the Ft. McHenry tunnel in Baltimore, MD, over a one-week period in
September, 1998. Sampling was performed separately in two traffic tubes, one
carrying heavy-duty diesel trucks, the other carrying mostly gasoline-powered
passenger and other light-duty vehicles. Samples were also collected outside
the tunnel to provide background correction information on the ambient air
entering the tunnel that contributed to the samples collected. The samples were
analyzed for a variety of chemical species including organic and elemental
carbon, a large number of elements from aluminum to lead, and a large number
of organic compounds (e.g., C10 - C40 alkanes).

Research
Approach

National Exposure Research Laboratory - September 2000


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Results and The measurements have been assembled in a database that can be queried to
Implications obtain truck and car source profiles containing constituent chemical species as
may be desired by a user. Overall, the chemical source profiles derived from
the two traffic tunnels show distinct differences: the alkane distribution for cars
shows a maximum occurring at a larger carbon number than for trucks; the
elemental carbon (black soot) component in the truck profile is much more
prominent than for the car profile, and; the elemental iron component is
prominent in both, but more so in the car profile. These features, among others,
should allow the use of these profiles, with receptor modeling techniques, to
separate the contributions that the two vehicle categories make to ambient air
concentrations.

and
Publications

Research The field work and subsequent chemical analyses occurred through the
Collaboration collaborative efforts of researchers at NERL, the Florida Department of
Environmental Protection, and the Universities of Michigan, Miami, and
Maryland. Aspects of the work are described in the publications that follow.

Keeler, G.J, Dvonch, J.T., Barres, J.A. Mobile Source Profile Determination: Ft. McHenry
Traffic Tunnel Study Mercury Data Report to Florida Department of Environmental
Protection. 1999.

Milne, P., Haring, J., Zika, R., Ondov, J., Keeler, G., Stevens, R. High Molecular Weight

Alkane and Hydrocarbon Speciation in Fine Aerosol Particles: A Vehicle-Segregated
Tunnel Study from Baltimore (extended abstract). Presented at: PM2000: Particulate
matter and Health-The Scientific Basis for Regulatory Decision-Making. Specialty
Conference and Exhibition. January; Charleston, S.C. Pittsburgh, PA: Air& Waste
Management Association. 2000.

Lewis, C.W., Landis, M.S. Ft. McHenry Tunnel Mobile Source Profiles Data Base:
Description and Use. (Tunnel_data_summary.xls). 2000.

A comprehensive manuscript based on the measurements obtained in this
project is anticipated to be submitted to a peer-reviewed journal during FY01.
One of the first applications of the profiles will be in a major air quality study
in the Tampa, FL, region beginning in 2001 that will provide a field test of the
applicability of source apportionment models.

Inquiries about this project, as well as NERL's receptor modeling research

program, can be directed to:

Charles W. Lewis, Ph.D.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

National Exposure Research Laboratory (MD-47)

Research Triangle Park, NC 27711

Phone: (919)541-3154

E-mail: lewis.charlesw@epa.gov

Future
Research

National Exposure Research Laboratory - September 2000


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