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Fine (PM2.5), coarse (PM2.5-10), and metallic elements of suspended particulates for incense burning at Tzu Yun Yen temple in central Taiwan. | LitMetric

Fine (PM2.5), coarse (PM2.5-10), and metallic elements of suspended particulates for incense burning at Tzu Yun Yen temple in central Taiwan.

Chemosphere

Air Toxic and Environmental Analysis Laboratory, Department of Environmental Engineering, Hungkuang Institute of Technology, Hungkuang University, Sha-Lu, Taichung 433, Taiwan.

Published: June 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study measured ambient suspended particulate concentrations at Tzu Yun Yen temple to analyze the impact of incense burning, using a Universal-sampler.
  • The sampling period spanned from August 16, 2001, to January 2, 2002, with a focus on both fine particles (PM(2.5)) and larger coarse particles (PM(2.5-10)).
  • Results showed that fine particles predominated, with the PM(2.5)/PM(10) ratio averaging 70%, and the most abundant metallic elements identified were Fe, Zn, and Cr in both fine and coarse particles.

Article Abstract

Ambient suspended particulate concentrations were measured at Tzu Yun Yen temple (120 degrees, 34('), 10(") E; 24 degrees, 16('), 12(") N) in this study. This is representative of incense burning and semi-open sampling sites. The Universal-sampler collected fine and coarse particle material was used to measure suspended particulate concentrations, and sampling periods were from 16/08/2001 to 2/1/2002 at Tzu Yun Yen temple. In addition, metallic element concentrations, compositions of PM(2.5) and PM(2.5-10) for incense burning at Tzu Yun Yen temple were also analyzed in this study. The PM(2.5)/PM(10) ratios ranged between 31% and 87% and averaged 70+/-11% during incense the burning period, respectively. The median metallic element concentration order for these elements is Fe>Zn>Cr>Cd>Pb>Mn>Ni>Cu in fine particles (PM(2.5)) at the Tzu Yun Yen temple sampling site. The median metallic element concentration order for these elements is Fe>Zn>Cr>Pb>Cd>Ni>Mn>Cu in coarse particle (PM(2.5-10)) at the Tzu Yun Yen temple sampling site. Fine particulates (PM(2.5)) are the main portion of PM(10) at Tzu Yun Yen temple in this study. From the point of view of PM(10), these data reflect that the elements Fe, Zn, and Cr were the major elements distributed at Tzu Yun Yen temple in this study.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0045-6535(03)00124-3DOI Listing

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