Abstract
This study aimed at assessing the influence of vehicle traffic on spatial variation of ozone (O3) and its vehicular emission precursors in the air of Port Harcourt city. Sampling was carried out in ten (10) sites, eight (8) located within the high traffic density area (study sites) and two (2) located within the very low traffic density area (reference sites). The precursor pollutants measured were nitrogen dioxide (NO2), carbon monoxide (CO) and volatile organic compounds (VOCSs). Ozone and the precursor pollutants were measured in situ using AeroQUAL 500 series portable ambient air analyzer while traffic flow survey was achieved by direct counting. Measurements were carried out at morning, evening and off-peak traffic periods respectively. The mean concentrations of ozone and the precursor pollutants were significantly higher (p = 0.05) in the study sites than in the reference sites. Mean concentrations were higher at peak traffic periods than at off-peak traffic periods except for ozone that was higher at off-peak than at morning peak. There was significant correlation between traffic density and each of the pollutants including ozone. The spatial variability in concentration of pollutants was influenced by vehicular traffic. VOCs and NO2 levels were higher than the National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) limit of 0.05 ppm and 0.04 – 0.06 ppm respectively, O3 concentration was below the standard limit (0.06 ppm) but was at the verge of exceeding. Traffic emission within the city was significant and could be mitigated through regular monitoring and control.
Highlights
This study aimed at assessing the influence of vehicle traffic on spatial variation of ozone (O3) and its vehicular emission precursors in the air of Port Harcourt city
Reconnaissance survey was conducted to be acquainted with the study area, from the survey, ten (10) traffic junctions were chosen as sampling sites considering hotspots, intersections and vehicular traffic levels, eight (8) of them located within the high traffic density area while two (2) located within the very low traffic density area
The minimal concentrations were all observed at off-peak except for ozone that was at morning peak
Summary
This study aimed at assessing the influence of vehicle traffic on spatial variation of ozone (O3) and its vehicular emission precursors in the air of Port Harcourt city. From the studies on traffic-related pollution, only few like Emenike and Orjinmo (2017) relate traffic density to concentration of ozone and primary pollutants in the ambient air of Port Harcourt city. Ground level ozone (O3) is one of the most harmful air pollutants (Marais et al, 2014), it is not directly emitted into the air by vehicle combustion processes but formed photochemically from the oxidation of volatile organic compounds in the presence of nitrogen oxides and other pollutants including carbon monoxide in the atmosphere (Sharma et al, 2017). The objective of this study is to assess the influence of vehicle traffic emissions on spatial variation of ozone and its vehicular emission precursors (NO2, CO and VOCs) in the air of Port Harcourt city, Nigeria
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