Mean Vehicle Speed Distributions for the Spatiotemporal Estimation of Exhaust Emissions |
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Authors: | L. Schultz P. Shah E. Giandomenico B. Chiera |
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Affiliation: | 1.Centre for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, School of Information Technology and Mathematical Sciences,University of South Australia,Adelaide,Australia;2.Air and Noise Group, Science and Assessment Division,South Australian Environment Protection Authority,Adelaide,Australia;3.Programa de Infraestructura Regional para la Integración,Universidad Nacional de Rosario,Rosario,Argentina |
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Abstract: | Link Emissions Models estimate traffic-related air pollution emissions at the individual road link level and inform governmental policies for air quality management. The current South Australian Link Emissions Model (CLEM) assumes constant spatiotemporal traffic flow at a single fixed mean speed, a potential limitation as the variability of exhaust emissions with vehicle speed has been established in the literature.We extend CLEM to eliminate the assumption of constant traffic flow, through the derivation of mean Australian vehicle speed distributions for different road types. Specifically, we successfully model the vehicle speed profile data from the second National In-Service Emissions study using Nearest Neighbour Kernel Density Estimation. We propose a mean speed Distribution Link Emissions Model (DLEM) for exhaust emission estimation based on the derived mean speed distributions. DLEM is an augmented, enhanced version of CLEM, accommodating a range of vehicle speeds and road types. The performance of the extended model, DLEM, is analysed in comparison to the current model, CLEM, through a case study analysis of vehicle exhaust emissions on a typical arterial road in Adelaide, South Australia. Results indicate use of DLEM and, by extension, mean vehicle speed distributions, has a strong impact on emission estimation. In particular, the fixed speed model, CLEM, may be substantially underestimating exhaust emissions of carbon monoxide, non-methane volatile organic compounds and particulate matter less than 2.5 μm in diameter. These are common exhaust pollutants that have been extensively linked with adverse health effects including respiratory morbidity and premature mortality. |
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