Abstract

During the fall of 1972, a study was undertaken to characterize gaseous air pollutants in the St. Louis metropolitan area. Information obtained in this study will be used in planning air pollution modeling studies to be carried out over the next 4 or 5 years under the Regional Air Pollution Study (RAPS) of the Environmental Protection Agency. From analyses of roadway samples, it was found that certain compounds in automotive emissions such as acetylene, carbon monoxide, o-xylene, ethylene, and 2-methylpentane occur in consistent proportions to other compounds. The concentrations of these indicator compounds in atmospheric samples were used to estimate the amounts of other hydrocarbons present that are attributable to automotive related emissions. Methane, ethane, and propane were found to originate principally from nonautomotive sources, both at St. Louis University and the St. Louis CAMP station. Similar concentrations were found in urban and non-urban areas. A comparison of ethylene-CO and propyl-ene-CO ratios in urban and non-urban areas indicates that CO can serve as an indicator of transport of urban pollutants. Sunlight irradiations of captured air samples showed increasing ozone production with increasing initial concentrations of hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides. Substantial ozone and peroxyacetyl nitrate were formed from a total non-methane hydrocarbon concentration of only 1/4 ppm C.

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