Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Anthropogenic fugitive, combustion and industrial dust is a significant, underrepresented fine particulate matter source in global atmospheric models

2017; IOP Publishing; Volume: 12; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1088/1748-9326/aa65a4

ISSN

1748-9326

Autores

Sajeev Philip, Randall V. Martin, Graydon Snider, Crystal Weagle, Aaron van Donkelaar, Michael Bräuer, Daven K. Henze, Zbigniew Klimont, Chandra Venkataraman, Sarath Guttikunda, Qiang Zhang,

Tópico(s)

Atmospheric aerosols and clouds

Resumo

Global measurements of the elemental composition of fine particulate matter across several urban locations by the Surface Particulate Matter Network reveal an enhanced fraction of anthropogenic dust compared to natural dust sources, especially over Asia. We develop a global simulation of anthropogenic fugitive, combustion, and industrial dust which, to our knowledge, is partially missing or strongly underrepresented in global models. We estimate 2–16 μg m−3 increase in fine particulate mass concentration across East and South Asia by including anthropogenic fugitive, combustion, and industrial dust emissions. A simulation including anthropogenic fugitive, combustion, and industrial dust emissions increases the correlation from 0.06 to 0.66 of simulated fine dust in comparison with Surface Particulate Matter Network measurements at 13 globally dispersed locations, and reduces the low bias by 10% in total fine particulate mass in comparison with global in situ observations. Global population-weighted PM2.5 increases by 2.9 μg m−3 (10%). Our assessment ascertains the urgent need of including this underrepresented fine anthropogenic dust source into global bottom-up emission inventories and global models.

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