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The influence of street layouts and viaduct settings on daily carbon monoxide exposure and intake fraction in idealized urban canyons.

Authors :
Hang, Jian
Luo, Zhiwen
Wang, Xuemei
He, Lejian
Wang, Baomin
Zhu, Wei
Source :
Environmental Pollution; Jan2017 Part A, Vol. 220, p72-86, 15p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Environmental concerns have been raised on the adverse health effects of vehicle emissions in micro-scale traffic-crowded street canyons, especially for pedestrians and residents living in near-road buildings. Viaduct design is sometimes used to improve transportation efficiency but possibly affects urban airflow and the resultant exposure risk, which have been rarely investigated so far. The personal intake fraction ( P _ IF ) is defined as the average fraction of total emissions that is inhaled by each person of a population (1 ppm = 1 × 10 −6 ), and the daily carbon monoxide (CO) pollutant exposure ( E t ) is estimated by multiplying the average concentration of a specific micro-environment within one day. As a novelty, by considering time activity patterns and breathing rates in various micro-environments for three age groups, this paper introduces IF and E t into computational fluid dynamic (CFD) simulation to quantify the impacts of street layouts (street width/building height W / H = 1, 1.5, 2), source location, viaduct settings and noise barriers on the source-exposure correlation when realistic CO sources are defined. Narrower streets experience larger P_ IF (1.51–5.21 ppm) and CO exposure, and leeward-side buildings always attain higher vehicular pollutant exposure than windward-side. Cases with a viaduct experience smaller P_IF (3.25–1.46 ppm) than cases without a viaduct ( P_IF = 5.21–2.23 ppm) if the single ground-level CO source is elevated onto the viaduct. With two CO sources (both ground-level and viaduct-level), daily CO exposure rises 2.80–3.33 times but P_IF only change slightly. Noise barriers above a viaduct raise concentration between barriers, but slightly reduce vehicular exposure in near-road buildings. Because people spend most of their time indoors, vehicular pollutant exposure within near-road buildings can be 6–9 times that at pedestrian level. Although further studies are still required to provide practical guidelines, this paper provides effective methodologies to quantify the impacts of street/viaduct configurations on human exposure for urban design purpose. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02697491
Volume :
220
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Environmental Pollution
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
119787221
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2016.09.024