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Mapping air quality zones for coastal urban centers.

Authors :
Freeman, Brian
Gharabaghi, Bahram
Thé, Jesse
Munshed, Mohammad
Faisal, Shah
Abdullah, Meshal
Al Aseed, Athari
Source :
Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association (Taylor & Francis Ltd). May2017, Vol. 67 Issue 5, p565-581. 17p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

This study presents a new method that incorporates modern air dispersion models allowing local terrain and land–sea breeze effects to be considered along with political and natural boundaries for more accurate mapping of air quality zones (AQZs) for coastal urban centers. This method uses local coastal wind patterns and key urban air pollution sources in each zone to more accurately calculate air pollutant concentration statistics. The new approach distributes virtual air pollution sources within each small grid cell of an area of interest and analyzes a puff dispersion model for a full year’s worth of 1-hr prognostic weather data. The difference of wind patterns in coastal and inland areas creates significantly different skewness (S) and kurtosis (K) statistics for the annually averaged pollutant concentrations at ground level receptor points for each grid cell. Plotting theS-Kdata highlights grouping of sources predominantly impacted by coastal winds versus inland winds. The application of the new method is demonstrated through a case study for the nation of Kuwait by developing new AQZs to support local air management programs. The zone boundaries established by theS-Kmethod were validated by comparing MM5 and WRF prognostic meteorological weather data used in the air dispersion modeling, a support vector machine classifier was trained to compare results with the graphical classification method, and final zones were compared with data collected from Earth observation satellites to confirm locations of high-exposure-risk areas. The resulting AQZs are more accurate and support efficient management strategies for air quality compliance targets effected by local coastal microclimates. Implications: A novel method to determine air quality zones in coastal urban areas is introduced using skewness (S) and kurtosis (K) statistics calculated from grid concentrations results of air dispersion models. The method identifies land–sea breeze effects that can be used to manage local air quality in areas of similar microclimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10962247
Volume :
67
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association (Taylor & Francis Ltd)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
122343151
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/10962247.2016.1265025