Inicio  /  Atmósfera  /  Vol: 22 Núm: 2 Par: 0 (2009)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Volatile organic compounds in the downtown area of Mexicali, México during the spring of 2005: analysis of ambient data and source-receptor modeling

A. MENDOZA    
A. A. GUTIÉRREZ    
E. I. PARDO    

Resumen

The border city of Mexicali has some of the worst air pollution in México, mainly due to the high levels of fine particulate matter (PM) and O3 registered. This also impacts the air quality of communities across the border in California?s Imperial Valley. A field campaign was conducted in April of 2005 to obtain ambient concentrations of volatile organic compounds (VOC), and thus obtain insight on the levels and sources of these O3 and fine PM precursors. Six-liter stainless steel canisters were deployed at a site located in the downtown area of the city to obtain ambient air samples that were then analyzed for 54 selected target species. Samples were collected on a daily basis at three different sampling times: 6-9, 13-16, and 20-23 h LT. Average total non-methane organic compounds (TNMOC) concentration was 560 ppbC, with the morning samples having the highest reported average concentration (795) and the afternoon the lowest (257 ppbC). Aromatics contributed around 24% to the TNMOC concentration. Correlation between different species indicates strong influence of local anthropogenic sources (e.g., xylenes-benzene ratio of 2.1). In addition, high correlations between typical products from internal combustion engines (e.g., acetylene-ethene R2 = 0.90, ethene-propylene R2 = 0.94, benzene-ethene R2 = 0.75) across all samples and a consistent contribution of more than 15% of these species (ethene, acetylene, propylene and benzene) indicate major contribution from mobile sources. This is supported by receptor modeling results obtained through the application of the Chemical Mass Balance model to the ambient data. Source apportionment estimates indicate a 56% contribution of gasoline-related mobile source emissions to the VOC that were measured, 18 contribution from LPG emissions, 6 from diesel exhaust, and 5 from consumer products.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Cristina Di Fiore, Pietro Pandolfi, Fabiana Carriera, Alessia Iannone, Gaetano Settimo, Vincenzo Mattei and Pasquale Avino    
Indoor air quality has become a topic of great concern. Burning incense has recently been identified as one of the primary sources of volatile organic compounds, specifically benzene, in an indoor setting. The current paper aims to evaluate volatile orga... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Shangye Chu, Xu Zeng, Hai Lin and Yuting Zhu    
The performance of catalytic wet oxidation of excess activated sludge derived from pharmaceutical wastewater treatment over a Cu/?-Al2O3 catalyst was investigated. The experiments were performed with a stainless steel autoclave reactor by using the prepa... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Jieying Liu and Zhigao Bi    
Anaerobic digestion is a promising technology for treating and disposing of oily sludge, but the presence of oil in the sludge reduces methane production and sludge volume reduction. To overcome this limitation, this study creatively reports the use of m... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Alexander Dorofeev, Anna Pelevina, Yuri Nikolaev, Yulia Berestovskaya, Evgeny Gruzdev, Andrey Mardanov and Nikolai Pimenov    
Candidatus Accumulibacter belongs to phosphate-accumulating organisms (PAOs) which exhibit a cyclic metabolism and are capable of intracellular polyphosphate accumulation and their hydrolysis under feast-famine anaerobic-aerobic cycling. In consortia of ... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Jemma R. P. Forgie, Floriane Leclinche, Emilie Dréan and Patricia I. Dolez    
Nanofibrous membranes have gained interest for their small pore size, light weight, and excellent filtration. When produced from high-performance polymers, nanofibrous membranes also benefit from excellent mechanical properties, thermal resistance, and c... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences