Title of article :
Particulate matter exposure along designated bicycle routes in
Vancouver, British Columbia
Author/Authors :
Amy Thaia، نويسنده , , Ian McKendrya، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Michael Brauerb، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
An instrumented bicycle was used to elucidate particulate matter exposures along bicycle
routes passing through a variety of land uses over 14 days during summer and fall in a midlatitude
traffic dominated urban setting. Overall, exposures were low or comparable to those
found in studies elsewhere (mean PM2.5 and PM10 concentrations over each daily bicycle
traverse varied between 7–34 μg m−3 and 26–77 μg m−3 respectively). Meteorological factors
were responsible for significant day-to-day variability with PM2.5 positively correlated with
air temperature, PM10 negatively correlated with precipitation, and ultrafine particles
negatively correlated with both air temperature and wind speed. On individual days, land
use and proximity to traffic were factors significantly affecting exposure along designated
bicycle routes. While concentrations of PM2.5 were found to be relatively spatially uniform
over the length of the study route, PM10 showed a more heterogeneous spatial distribution.
Specifically, construction sites and areas susceptible to the suspension of road dust have
higher concentrations of coarse particles. Ultrafine particles were also heterogeneously
distributed in space, with areas with heavy traffic volumes having the highest
concentrations. Observations show qualitative agreement in terms of spatial patterns
with a land-use regression (LUR) model for annual PM2.5 concentrations
Keywords :
Particulate matter exposureCycle routesUrban air pollution
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment