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Development of nitrogen dioxide and volatile organic compounds land use regression models to estimate air pollution exposure near an Italian airport

The aim of this study was to evaluate the small scale spatial variability of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and selected VOCs (benzene, toluene, acrolein and formaldehyde) concentrations using Land Use Regression models (LURs) in a complex multi sources domain (64 km2), containing a mid-size airport: the Ci...

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Published in:Atmospheric environment (1994) 2016-04, Vol.131, p.254-262
Main Authors: Gaeta, Alessandra, Cattani, Giorgio, Di Menno di Bucchianico, Alessandro, De Santis, Antonella, Cesaroni, Giulia, Badaloni, Chiara, Ancona, Carla, Forastiere, Francesco, Sozzi, Roberto, Bolignano, Andrea, Sacco, Fabrizio
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Language:English
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Summary:The aim of this study was to evaluate the small scale spatial variability of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and selected VOCs (benzene, toluene, acrolein and formaldehyde) concentrations using Land Use Regression models (LURs) in a complex multi sources domain (64 km2), containing a mid-size airport: the Ciampino Airport, located in Ciampino, Rome, Italy. 46 diffusion tube samplers were deployed within a domain centred in the airport over two 2-weekly periods (June 2011–January 2012). GIS-derived predictor variables, with varying buffer size, were evaluated to model spatial variation of NO2, benzene, toluene, formaldehyde and acrolein annual average concentrations. The airport apportionment to air quality was investigated using a Lagrangian dispersion model (SPRAY). A stepwise selection procedure was used to develop the linear regression models. The models were validated using leave one out cross validation (LOOCV) method. In this study, the use of LURs was found to be effective to explain spatial variability of NO2 (adjusted-R2 = 0.72), benzene (adjusted-R2 = 0.53), toluene (adjusted-R2 = 0.50) and acrolein (adjusted-R2 = 0.51), while limited power was achieved with the formaldehyde modeling (adjusted-R2 = 0.24). For all pollutants LURs output showed that the small scale spatial variability was mainly explained by local traffic. The airport contribution to the observed spatial variability was adequately quantified only for acrolein (0.43 (±0.69) μg/m3 in an area of about 6 km2, SW located to the airport runway), while for NO2 and formaldehyde, only a little portion of the spatial variability in a limited portion of the study domain was attributable to airport related emissions. •NO2 and VOC's land use regression models were developed near Ciampino airport, Rome.•NO2, benzene, toluene, formaldehyde and acrolein were measured by passive sampling.•NO2, benzene, toluene and acrolein LUR models performed well.•Limited power was achieved with the formaldehyde modeling.•A little airport contribution was estimated for acrolein, NO2 and formaldheyde.
ISSN:1352-2310
1873-2844
DOI:10.1016/j.atmosenv.2016.01.052