Institute of Environmental Assessment and Water Research (IDAEA-CSIC)
Abstract
Ultrafine particles (UFP, those with diameters ≤100 nm), have been reported to potentially penetrate deeply into the respiratory system, translocate through the alveoli, and affect various organs, potentially correlating with increased mortality. The aim of this study is to assess long-term trends (5-11 years) in mostly urban UFP concentrations based on measurements of particle number size distributions (PNSD). Additionally, concentrations of other pollutants and meteorological variables were evaluated to support the interpretations. PNSD datasets from 12 urban background (UB), 5 traffic (TR), 3 suburban background (SUB) and 1 regional background (RB) sites in 15 European cities and 1 in the USA were evaluated. The non-parametric Theil-Sen’s method was used to detect monotonic trends. Meta-analyses were carried out to assess the overall trends and those for different environments. The results showed significant decreases in NO, NO2, BC, CO, and particle concentrations in the Aitken (25-100 nm) and the Accumulation (100-800 nm) modes, suggesting a positive impact of the implementation of EURO 5/V and 6/VI vehicle standards on European air quality. The growing use of Diesel Particle Filters (DPFs) might also have clearly reduced exhaust emissions of BC, PM, and the Aitken and Accumulation mode particles. However, as reported by prior studies, there remains an issue of poor control of Nucleation mode particles (smaller than 25 nm), which are not fully reduced with current DPFs, without emission controls for semi-volatile organic compounds, and might have different origins than road traffic. Thus, contrasting trends for Nucleation mode particles were obtained across the cities studied. This mode also affected the UFP and total PNC trends because of the high proportion of Nucleation mode particles in both concentration ranges.
Keywords: nanoparticles, particle number concentrations, air quality, ambient air
Garcia-Marlès, Meritxell and Lara, Rosa and Reche, Cristina and Pérez, Noemi and Tobías, Aurelio and Savadkoohi, Marjan and beddows, d and SALMA, Imre and Vörösmarty, Máté and Weidinger, Tamás and Hueglin, Christoph and Mihalopoulos, Nikos and Grivas, Georgios and Kalkavouras, Panayiotis and Ondracek, Jakub and Zíková, Naděžda and Niemi, Jarkko V. and Manninen, Hanna Elina and Green, David C. and Tremper, Anja H. and Norman, Michael and Vratolis, Stergios and Eleftheriadis, Konstantinos and Gómez-Moreno, Francisco J. and Alonso-Blanco, Elisabeth and Wiedensohler, Alfred and Weinhold, Kay and Merkel, Maik and Bastian, Susanne and Hoffmann, Barbara and Altug, Hicran and Petit, Jean-Eudes and favez, Olivier and Dos Santos, Sebastiao Martins and Putaud, Jean-Philippe and Dinoi, Adelaide and Contini, Daniele and Timonen, Hilkka and Lampilahti, Janne and Petäjä, Tuukka and Pandolfi, Marco and Hopke, Philip K. and Harrison, Roy M. and Alastuey, Andrés and Querol, Xavier, Inter-Annual Trends of Ultrafine Particles in Urban Europe. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4679433 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4679433