4.5 Article

Indoor/Outdoor Relationships for Organic and Elemental Carbon in PM2.5 at Residential Homes in Guangzhou, China

期刊

AEROSOL AND AIR QUALITY RESEARCH
卷 12, 期 5, 页码 902-910

出版社

TAIWAN ASSOC AEROSOL RES-TAAR
DOI: 10.4209/aaqr.2012.02.0026

关键词

Organic carbon; Elemental carbon; PM2.5; Residential Homes; Guangzhou

资金

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [NSFC 40925009]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences [KZCX2-YW-BR-10]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Nine residential areas were selected in this study (three homes in urban areas, three homes near roadsides, and three homes in industrial zones) to evaluate the indoor and outdoor relationship and carbonaceous species characteristics of PM2.5 in Guangzhou, China, during summer and winter 2004. Daily (24 h) average PM2.5 samples were collected on pre-fired quartz-fiber filters with low-volume samplers and analyzed by the thermal optical reflectance (TOR) method following the Interagency Monitoring of PROtected Visual Environments (IMPROVE) protocol. The average indoor and outdoor concentrations of PM2.5 were 88.8 mu g/m(3) and 99.1 mu g/m(3), respectively. The average indoor OC and EC concentrations were 21.7 mu g/m(3), and 7.6 mu g/m(3), respectively, accounting for an average of 25.5% and 8.9% indoor PM2.5 mass, respectively. The average indoor and outdoor OC/EC ratios were 3.4 and 3.0, respectively. The average I/O ratios of PM2.5, OC and EC were 0.91, 1.02 and 0.96, respectively. Poor indoor-outdoor correlations were observed for OC in the summer (R-2 = 0.18) and winter (R-2 = 0.33), while strong correlations (R-2 > 0.8) were observed for EC during summer and winter. OC and EC were moderately correlated (R-2 = 0.4) during summer, while OC and EC correlated well during winter, with a correlation coefficient of 0.64 indoors and 0.75 outdoors. Similar distributions of eight carbon fractions in indoor and outdoor TC pointed to the contributions of motor vehicle exhaust and coal-combustion sources. A simple estimation indicates that about ninety percent of carbonaceous particles in indoor air result from penetration of outdoor pollutants, and indoor sources contribute only ten percent of the indoor carbonaceous particles.

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