Abstract

Continuous ambient air monitoring systems have been introduced worldwide. However, such monitoring forces autonomous communities to bear a significant financial burden. Thus, it is important to identify pollutant-monitoring stations that are less efficient, while minimizing loss of data quality and mitigating effects on the determination of spatiotemporal trends of pollutants. This study describes a procedure for optimizing a constant ambient air monitoring system in the Kanto region of Japan. Constant ambient air monitoring stations in the area were topologically classified into four groups by cluster analysis and principle component analysis. Then, air pollution characteristics in each area were reviewed using concentration contour maps and average pollution concentrations. We then introduced three simple criteria to reduce the number of monitoring stations: (1) retain the monitoring station if there were similarities between its data and average data of the group to which it belongs; (2) retain the station if its data showed higher concentrations; and (3) retain the station if the monitored concentration levels had an increasing trend. With this procedure, the total number of air monitoring stations in suburban and urban areas was reduced by 36.5%. The introduction of three new types of monitoring stations is proposed, namely, mobile, for local non-methane hydrocarbon pollution, and Ox-prioritized.

Highlights

  • Continuous ambient air monitoring systems have been introduced worldwide [1,2,3,4,5]

  • We considered further grouping of the stations in Kanto using principal component analysis (PCA)

  • The two years were selected to evaluate the influence of the Automobile NOx/PM Act of Japan and diesel control, in which a series of raw revisions were made from 1999 to 2005

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Summary

Introduction

Continuous ambient air monitoring systems have been introduced worldwide [1,2,3,4,5]. Data obtained from such monitoring can provide important information about surrounding atmospheric pollution. Lu et al [7] proposed a revised air quality index to provide information on current air quality from monitoring network data. This monitoring forces autonomous communities to bear a significant financial burden. There are no current reliable guidelines regarding the optimal method by which this can be achieved

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