Roadside measurement and prediction of CO and PM2.5 dispersion from on-road vehicles in Hong Kong

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Author(s)

  • J. S. Wang
  • T. L. Chan
  • C. W. Leung
  • C. S. Cheung
  • W. T. Hung

Detail(s)

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)242-249
Journal / PublicationTransportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment
Volume11
Issue number4
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2006
Externally publishedYes

Abstract

This study investigates the traffic induced gaseous and particle emissions dispersion characteristics from the typical urban roadside sites in Hong Kong. Concentrations of carbon monoxide, CO, fine particles, PM2.5 pollutants, and the traffic and ambient atmospheric conditions at three selected local urban road sites were simultaneously measured. A developed local general finite line source model (GFLSM) was used to predict the local roadside CO and fine particle concentrations. A high level of agreement found between the measured and calculated CO and PM2.5 data. Generally, the roadside concentrations of gaseous and PM2.5 pollutants decrease with the distance away from the road and the exposure to both gaseous and particle pollutants in the vicinity of the selected urban road sites is interrelated to on-road vehicle emissions. It has also demonstrated that the developed local general finite line source model has the capability of reasonably predicting the characteristics of gaseous and particle pollutant dispersion from on-road vehicles for the local urban air quality. © 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Research Area(s)

  • Carbon monoxide, Field measurement, Finite line source dispersion model, On-road vehicles, Particulate matter, PM2.5

Citation Format(s)