Aerosol mass and size-resolved metal content in urban Bangkok, Thailand
Antimony
550
Iron
Air pollution
Automotive
01 natural sciences
333
Arsenic
Selenium
Nickel
11. Sustainability
Toxic metals
Automotive exhaust
Humans
Magnesium
Particle Size
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Molybdenum
Aerosols
Air Pollutants
Ultrafine aerosols
Thailand
3. Good health
Zinc
13. Climate action
Carcinogens
Calcium
Particulate Matter
Particulate matter
Copper
Research Article
Cadmium
Environmental Monitoring
DOI:
10.1007/s11356-022-20806-w
Publication Date:
2022-06-15T18:02:52Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
AbstractInhalable particulate matter (PM) is a health concern, and people living in large cities such as Bangkok are exposed to high concentrations. This exposure has been linked to respiratory and cardiac diseases and cancers of the lung and brain. Throughout 2018, PM was measured in northern Bangkok near a toll road (13.87°N, 100.58°E) covering all three seasons (cool, hot and rainy). PM10 was measured in 24- and 72-h samples. On selected dates aerodynamic size and mass distribution were measured as 3-day samples from a fixed 5th floor inlet. Particle number concentration was measured from the 5th floor inlet and in roadside survey measurements. There was a large fraction of particle number concentration in the sub-micron range, which showed the greatest variability compared with larger fractions. Metals associated with combustion sources were most found on the smaller size fraction of particles, which may have implications for associated adverse health outcomes because of the likely location of aerosol deposition in the distal airways of the lung. PM10 samples varied between 30 and 100 μg m−3, with highest concentrations in the cool season. The largest metal fractions present in the PM10 measurements were calcium, iron and magnesium during the hot season with average airborne concentrations of 13.2, 3.6 and 2.0 μg m−3, respectively. Copper, zinc, arsenic, selenium, molybdenum, cadmium, antimony and lead had large non-crustal sources. Principal component analysis (PCA) identified likely sources of the metals as crustal minerals, tailpipe exhaust and non-combustion traffic. A health risk analysis showed a higher risk of both carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic health effects in the drier seasons than the wet season due to ingestion of nickel, arsenic, cadmium and lead.
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