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Chemical mass balance model with fractionation for apportioning PM2.5: a test case for Los Angeles traffic sources
Authors:Sattler Melanie L  Liljestrand Howard M
Institution:Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX 76016, USA. sattler@ce.uta.edu
Abstract:Chemical mass balance receptor models (CMBs) use measured pollutant concentrations, along with source information, to apportion the contributions of primary sources to the measured concentrations. CMBs can be used to evaluate the accuracy of the emission inventories that underlie State Implementation Plan (SIP) modeling, by providing an allocation of emissions to individual source categories. CMBs, however, traditionally have not accounted for the chemical reaction and differential deposition or fractionation that occur between the source and receptor. This means that they have historically had severe limitations in apportioning secondary particulate matter (PM), which is an especially important component of fine PM (PM2.5). Stafford and Liljestrand developed a method to account for fractionation in CMBs using depletion factors based on a solution of the steady-state advection-dispersion equation, including gravitational settling, dry deposition, and first-order chemical reaction.
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