Abstract

Decades of policy in developed regions has successfully reduced total anthropogenic emissions of gas-phase organic compounds, especially volatile organic compounds (VOCs), with an intentional, sustained focus on motor vehicles and other combustion-related sources. We examine potential secondary organic aerosol (SOA) and ozone formation in our case study megacity (Los Angeles), and demonstrate that non-combustion-related sources now contribute a major fraction of SOA and ozone precursors. Thus, they warrant greater attention beyond indoor environments to resolve large uncertainties in their emissions, oxidation chemistry, and outdoor air quality impacts in cities worldwide. We constrain the magnitude and chemical composition of emissions via several bottom-up approaches using: chemical analyses of products, emissions inventory assessments, theoretical calculations of emission timescales, and a survey of consumer product material safety datasheets. We demonstrate that the chemical composition of emissions from consumer products, and commercial/industrial products, processes, and materials is diverse across and within product/material-types with a wide range of SOA and ozone formation potentials that rivals other prominent sources, such as motor vehicles. With emission timescales from minutes to years, emission rates and source profiles need to be included, updated, and/or validated in emissions inventories, with expected regional/national variability. In particular, intermediate-volatility and semivolatile organic compounds (IVOCs and SVOCs) are key precursors to SOA but are excluded or poorly represented in emissions inventories, and exempt from emissions targets. We present an expanded framework for classifying VOC, IVOC, and SVOC emissions from this diverse array of sources that emphasizes a lifecycle approach over longer timescales and three emission pathways that extend beyond the short-term evaporation of VOCs: (1) solvent evaporation, (2) solute off-gassing, and (3) volatilization of degradation by-products. Furthermore, we find that ambient SOA formed from these non-combustion-related emissions could be misattributed to fossil fuel combustion due to the isotopic signature of their petroleum-based feedstocks.

Highlights

  • Anthropogenic emissions of gas-phase organic compounds, including volatile organic compounds (VOCs), are of direct concern as toxic or carcinogenic air pollutants in indoor and outdoor environments (Cohen et al, 2005; Nazaroff and Weschler, 2004; Weschler and Nazaroff, 2008)

  • The emittable organic fraction of raw products is defined by volatility and approximated as VOCs + IVOCs via our chemical analysis and reported material safety datasheets (MSDSs) data

  • We find that the consumer products and the commercial and industrial processes that comprise product- and process-related sources in the inventory are altogether large emitters of a diverse suite of VOCs, but view these results as a lower estimate given likely missing emissions, such as those discussed in Sects. 2 and 4.1.3

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Summary

Introduction

Anthropogenic emissions of gas-phase organic compounds, including volatile organic compounds (VOCs), are of direct concern as toxic or carcinogenic air pollutants in indoor and outdoor environments (Cohen et al, 2005; Nazaroff and Weschler, 2004; Weschler and Nazaroff, 2008) Often they are more important for air quality as reactive precursors to the formation of outdoor tropospheric ozone and secondary organic aerosol (SOA) as well as indoor SOA and play a central role in the elevated mortality and morbidity rates caused by fine-mode particulate matter (i.e., PM2.5) and ozone in both developed and developing regions (Destaillats et al, 2006; Jerrett et al, 2009; Lim et al, 2012; Nazaroff and Weschler, 2004; Pope and Dockery, 2006; Sarwar et al, 2004; Singer et al, 2006; Weschler, 2011). Gentner: The increasing influence of non-combustion sources on urban air quality urban areas and 82 % downwind on average (Zhang et al, 2007)

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