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Advanced Receptor Modeling for Source Identification and Apportionment

Advanced Receptor Modeling for Source Identification and Apportionment. Philip K. Hopke Center for Air Resources Engineering and Science Clarkson University. OUTLINE. Background Air Quality Management Receptor Models Factor Analysis Positive Matrix Factorization Applications Summary.

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Advanced Receptor Modeling for Source Identification and Apportionment

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  1. Advanced Receptor Modeling for Source Identification and Apportionment Philip K. Hopke Center for Air Resources Engineering and Science Clarkson University

  2. OUTLINE • Background • Air Quality Management • Receptor Models • Factor Analysis • Positive Matrix Factorization • Applications • Summary

  3. Receptor Modeling The management of air quality involves the identification of the pollution sources, the quantitative estimation of the emission rates of the pollutants, the understanding of the transport of the substances from the sources to downwind locations, and knowledge of the physical and chemical transformation processes that can occur during that transport.

  4. Receptor Modeling All of those elements can then be put together into a mathematical model that can be used to estimate the changes in observable airborne concentrations that might be expected to occur if various actions are taken.

  5. RECEPTOR MODELING

  6. Receptor Modeling Thus, other methods are needed to assist in the identification of sources and the apportionment of the observed pollutant concentrations to those sources.

  7. Receptor Modeling Receptor models are focused on the behavior of the ambient environment at the point of impact as opposed to the source-oriented models that focus on the transport, dilution, and transformations that begin at the source and follow the pollutants to the sampling or receptor site.

  8. Receptor Modeling PRINCIPLE OF AEROSOL MASS BALANCE The fundamental principle of receptor modeling is that mass conservation can be assumed and a mass balance analysis can be used to identify and apportion sources of airborne particulate matter in the atmosphere.

  9. Mass Balance A mass balance equation can be written to account for all m chemical species in the n samples as contributions from p independent sources Where i = 1,…, n samples, j = 1,…, m species and k = 1,…, p sources

  10. Receptor Modeling • The question is then what is known a priori to solve this equation. • Divide the problem into two classes • Source Profiles Known • Source Profiles Unknown

  11. Mass Balance A mass balance equation can be written to account for all m chemical species in the n samples as contributions from p independent sources Where i = 1,…, n samples, j = 1,…, m species and k = 1,…, p sources

  12. Receptor Modeling • SOURCES PROFILES KNOWN • Chemical Mass Balance • Multivariate Calibration Methods • Partial Least Squares • Artificial Neural Networks • Simulated Annealing • Genetic Algorithm

  13. Mass Balance However, generally we do not know source profiles and we only have the available ambient concentration data. Thus, can we deduce the number and nature of the sources and their contribution to each sample through an appropriate data analysis method?

  14. Receptor Modeling • SOURCES PROFILES UNKNOWN • Factor Analysis • Principal Components Analysis • Absolute Principal Components Analysis • SAFER/UNMIX • Positive Matrix Factorization

  15. Factor Analysis • Most factor analysis has been based on an eigenvector analysis. In an eigenvector analysis, it can be shown [Lawson and Hanson, 1974; Malinowski, 1991] that the equation estimates X in the least-squares sense that it gives the lowest possible value for

  16. Factor Analysis • Thus, most factor analysis use an unrealistic unweighted least-squares fit to the data.

  17. Factor Analysis The problem can be solved, but it does not produce a unique solution. It is possible to include a transformation into the equation. X=GTT-1F where T is one of the potential infinity of transformation matrices. This transformation is called a rotation and is generally included in order to produce factors that appear to be closer to physically real source profiles.

  18. Factor Analysis

  19. Positive Matrix Factorization • Explicit least-squares approach to solving the factor analysis problem • Individual data point weights • Imposition of natural and other constraints, and • Flexibility to build more complicated models

  20. Positive Matrix Factorization • The Objective Function, Q, is defined by where σij is an estimate of the uncertainty in xij

  21. IMPROVE Monitoring Network • IMPROVE: Interagency Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments • IMPROVE aerosol sampler: 4 modules Source: http://vista.cira.colostate.edu

  22. IMPROVE aerosol monitoring • Module A: PM2.5 on Teflon filter (UC, Davis) • Gravimetric mass • Proton Elastic Scattering Analysis (PESA) for hydrogen • Proton Induces X-ray Emission (PIXE) for Na – Mn • X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) for Fe – Pb • Module B: denuder, PM2.5 on nylon filter (RTI) • Ion Chromatography for sulfate, nitrate, nitrite, chloride • Module C: PM2.5 on quartz filter (DRI) • Thermal Optical Reflectance (TOR) method for 8 carbon fractions • Module D: PM10 on Teflon filter

  23. Carbon Analysis • As part of the IMPROVE protocol for the measurement of organic and elemental carbon (OC/EC), individual carbon fractions of OC (OC1, OC2, OC3, OC4) and EC (EC1, EC2, and EC3). In addition, the pyrolized fraction of the organic carbon (OP) is estimated

  24. Carbon analysis: IMPROVE/TOR method Source: Chow et al., 2001

  25. Monitoring site Washington, DC monitoring site • Roof of the Natl. Capitol Region Park Police HQ • 3 km NE of Ronald Reagan Washington Natl. Airport • 2 km SE of Lincoln Memorial

  26. Se vs. S

  27. Si 4/22/01 4/15/92 7/7/93 Silicon 1 • NOAA HYSPLIT model was used to calculate air mass backward trajectories for days with high Si conc. 6/24 – 7/7, 1993

  28. Si 4/22/01 4/15/92 7/7/93 Silicon 2 • Asian dust clouds • 4/6: developed over Mongolia • 4/13: start to impact the west coast 4/9 – 4/22, 2001

  29. Fireworks contributions • July 4 fireworks contributed to high conc. of K, Pb, and Cu 7/4/92 7/4/98 7/5/00 K Pb Cu

  30. OC/EC Fraction Results • A total of 718 samples collected between August 1988 and December 1997 and 35 species were used in this study.

  31. OC/EC Fraction Results

  32. Secondary Particles

  33. Secondary Particles

  34. Sulfate Factors • When the carbon thermal fractions are added to the data set, we have also extracted a third sulfate factor in addition to the winter/summer factors • This factor has been seen in data from Atlanta, GA, Washington, DC, and Brigantine, NJ.

  35. Sulfate-OP Factor

  36. Sulfate Factors in Washington, DC study Summer-high:Ohio river Valley, eastern Tennessee, southern Mississippi and Alabama OP-high:Canadian boreal fire, Central American forest fire Winter-high:North Carolina, Midwestern areas, southeastern Texas & Louisiana

  37. Sulfate Factor • With the carbon thermal fractions, the amount of carbon in the summer and winter sulfate factors drops substantially compared to analyses with total OC and EC.

  38. Sulfate Factor • Why is there a covariance between OP and sulfate? • Is this an indicator of secondary organic aerosol formation? • Is the secondary organic aerosol formation catalyzed by the acidity of the sulfate particles as suggested by Kamens?

  39. Combustion Sources

  40. Spark-Ignition in Multiple Cities

  41. Diesel in Multiple Cities

  42. OC/EC Fraction Results

  43. OC/EC Fraction Results

  44. Conclusions • We have tools to help analyze the complex compositional data being produced by the major monitoring networks in the United States. • These techniques will likely play an important role in the development of air quality management plans over the next several years.

  45. Thanks To • Eugene Kim and Bilkis Begum for performing the analyses presented. • Environmental Protection Agency and the International Atomic Energy Agency for financial support.

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