The epidemiological evidence for ultrafine particles (UFP; particles with diameter <100 nm) causing chronic health effects independent of fine particulate matter (PM) mass is inconclusive. A prevailing view is that urban UFP and PM mass have different spatial patterns, which should allow epidemiological studies to distinguish their independent, chronic health effects. We investigate intraurban spatial correlation of PM and UFP exposures in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Measurements and predictions of a land-use regression model indicate moderate spatial correlation between particle number concentrations (PNC; a proxy for UFP) and PM ( of 0.38 and 0.41, respectively). High-resolution (1-km) chemical transport model simulations predict stronger spatial correlation ( ≈ 0.8). The finding of moderate to strong spatial correlation was initially surprising because secondary aerosol contributes the vast majority of PM mass. However, intraurban spatial patterns of both PNC and PM are driven by local emissions and both pollutants largely behave as passive tracers at time scales of 1 day or less required for transport across most urban environments. Although previous research has shown little temporal correlation between PNC and PM, our finding of moderate to strong spatial correlation may complicate epidemiological analyses to separate the chronic health effects of PNC from PM mass.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.0c02763 | DOI Listing |
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