Author/Authors :
Lammel، نويسنده , , Gerhard and Kl?nov?، نويسنده , , Jana and Ili?، نويسنده , , Predrag and Kohoutek، نويسنده , , Ji?? and Gasi?، نويسنده , , Bojan and Kovaci?، نويسنده , , Igor and Laki?، نويسنده , , Nata?a and Radi?، نويسنده , , Ranka، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) were measured together with inorganic air pollutants at two urban sites and one rural background site in the Banja Luka area, Bosnia and Hercegovina, during 72 h in July 2008 using a high time resolution (5 samples per day) with the aim to study the spatial and temporal variabilities and to explore the significance of averaging effects inherent to 24 h-sampling. Measurement uncertainty was quantified on basis of three independent side-by-side samplers, deployed at one of the sites.
undances in the urban and rural environments differed largely. Levels at the urban sites exceeded the levels at the rural site by >100%. The discrepancy was largely dominated by emission of 3–4 ring PAHs in the city, while 5–6 ring PAHs were more evenly distributed between city sites and the hill site. During the night a higher fraction of the semivolatile PAHs might have been stored in the soil or sorbed to surfaces. PAH patterns were undistinguishable across the three sites. However, concentrations of more particle-associated substances differed significantly between the urban sites than between one of the urban sites and the rural site (3σ uncertainty). Time-averaging (on a 24 h-basis) would have masked the significant inter-site differences of half of the substances which were found at different levels (on a 4 h-basis).
Keywords :
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons , urban aerosol , air pollution , Spatial variability