Abstract

This study implements a two-box model coupled with ultrafine particle (UFP) multicomponent microphysics for a compartmentalised street canyon. Canyon compartmentalisation can be described parsimoniously by three parameters relating to the features of the canyon and the atmospheric state outside the canyon, i.e. the heterogeneity coefficient, the vortex-to-vortex exchange velocity, and the box height ratio. The quasi-steady solutions for the two compartments represent a balance among emissions, microphysical aerosol dynamics (i.e. evaporation/condensation of semi-volatiles, SVOCs), and exchange processes, none of which is negligible. This coupled two-box model can capture significant contrasts in UFP number concentrations and a measure of the volatility of the multi-SVOC-particles in the lower and upper canyon. Modelled ground-level UFP number concentrations vary across nucleation, Aitken, and accumulation particle modes as well-defined monotonic functions of canyon compartmentalisation parameters. Compared with the two-box model, a classic one-box model (without canyon compartmentalisation) leads to underestimation of UFP number concentrations by several tens of percent typically. By quantifying the effects of canyon compartmentalisation, this study provides a framework for understanding how canyon geometry and the presence of street trees, street furniture, and architectural features interact with the large-scale atmospheric flow to determine ground-level pollutant concentrations.

Highlights

  • Urban air pollution induced by road traffic is a key environmental concern (Murena et al, 2009)

  • A two-box model for a compartmentalised street canyon was coupled with ultrafine particle (UFP) microphysics to examine the number concentration size distribution (NCSD) of UFP at groundlevel

  • The model captures the significant contrasts in UFP number concentrations and a measure of the volatility of the multi-Semi-Volatile Organic Compounds (SVOC)-particles in the lower and upper parts of a street canyon

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Summary

Introduction

Urban air pollution induced by road traffic is a key environmental concern (Murena et al, 2009). As one of the major urban pollutants, particulate matter (PM) has received much attention in the scientific community (Dall'Osto et al, 2011; Heal et al, 2012). Regulations for ultrafine particle (UFP or PM0.1, dp < 0.1 mm) do not yet exist, UFP is a very significant contribution to total particle number concentrations (Harrison et al, 2000). UFP may accumulate in the lungs (Panis et al, 2010) or penetrate cells/. Semi-volatile components of UFP may contribute to secondary organic aerosol formation (Baldauf et al, 2016)

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