Title of article :
The contribution of traffic and solvent use to the
total NMVOC emission in a German city derived from
measurements and CMB modelling
Author/Authors :
Anita Niedojadlo، نويسنده , , Karl Heinz Becker، نويسنده , , Ralf Kurtenbach، نويسنده , , Peter Wiesen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
In order to quantify the contribution of solvent use and road traffic to the total non-methane volatile organic compound
(NMVOC) emissions in Germany, the composition of air in the city of Wuppertal was investigated during three campaigns
at different locations. The measurements covered NMVOCs in the range of C3–C10 hydrocarbons and C1–C6 oxygenated
compounds. An assessment of the contribution from different emission sources to the observed NMVOC concentrations
was attempted with the chemical mass balance (CMB) modelling technique. Emission profiles for traffic were obtained
from measurements performed in a traffic tunnel, at a downtown street intersection and during drives through the city and
on motorways. Solvent emission profiles were investigated in the vicinity of different factories and workshops using
solvents in Wuppertal. Apportionment analyses were performed for several receptor points located down-wind from the
city centre, in residential, dense traffic and industrial areas.
The results of the present work show that traffic emission rather than solvent use determines the ambient NMVOC
composition. The maximum contribution of solvent use to the NMVOC emission estimated on the basis of experimentally
obtained results amounts to about 23% in the whole area of Wuppertal. It can be concluded that the contribution of
solvent use to the NMVOC concentrations also in other German cities falls in the range of few to about 20%, assuming
that Wuppertal can be considered as a typical German urban area with certain proportions of domestic, traffic and various
industrial activities. These results are in strong disagreement with the German Emission Inventory, which states, that in the
reference year 2003 about 51% of the total NMVOC emissions originate from solvent use and only 14% from traffic.
Keywords :
volatile organic compounds , Chemical mass balance model , Source contribution , traffic emission , Solvent useemission , Source profiles
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment