Residential Wood Combustion in Germany: A Twin-Site Study of Local Village Contributions to Particulate Pollutants and Their Potential Health Effects

IF 6.7 Q1 ENGINEERING, ENVIRONMENTAL
Dominik van Pinxteren*, Vanessa Engelhardt, Falk Mothes, Laurent Poulain, Khanneh Wadinga Fomba, Gerald Spindler, Andrea Cuesta-Mosquera, Thomas Tuch, Thomas Müller, Alfred Wiedensohler, Gunter Löschau, Susanne Bastian and Hartmut Herrmann*, 
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Residential wood combustion contributing to airborne particulate matter (PM10) was studied for 1 year at two sites in the village of Melpitz. Significant excess pollution was observed at the Melpitz center compared to that at the TROPOS research station Melpitz reference site, situated only 700 m away. Local concentration increments at the village site for the combustion PM constituents organic carbon, elemental carbon, levoglucosan, and benzo[a]pyrene were determined under appropriate wind directions, and their winter mean values were 0.7 μg m–3, 0.3 μg m–3, 0.1 μg m–3, and 0.4 ng m–3, representing relative increases over the regional background concentration of 24, 70, 61, and 107%, respectively. Yearly, weekly, and diurnal profiles of village increments suggest residential heating as the dominant source of this excess pollution, mainly originating from wood combustion. Receptor modeling using positive matrix factorization quantified 4.5 μg m–3 wood combustion PM at the village site, representing an increment of 1.9 μg m–3 and an increase of ∼75% over the 2.6 μg m–3 regional background wood combustion PM. This increment varied with season, temperature, and boundary layer height and reached daily mean values of 4–6 μg m–3 during unfavorable meteorological conditions. Potential health effects were estimated and resulted in an all-cause mortality from short-term exposure to wood combustion PM of 2.1 cases per 100,000 inhabitants and year for areas with similar wood smoke levels as observed in Melpitz. The excess cancer risk from the concentrations of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons was 6.4 per 100,000. For both health metrics, the very local contributions from the village itself were about 40–50%, indicating a strong potential for mitigation through local-scale policies. A compilation of literature data demonstrates wood combustion to represent a major source of PM pollution in Germany, with average winter-time contributions of 10–20%. The present study quantifies the negative impacts of heating with wood in rural residential areas, where the continuous monitoring of air quality is typically lacking. Further regulation of this PM source is warranted in order to protect human health.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

德国住宅木材燃烧:当地村庄对颗粒污染物的贡献及其潜在健康影响的双站点研究
住宅木材燃烧对空气中颗粒物(PM10)的影响在Melpitz村的两个地点进行了为期一年的研究。与仅700米远的TROPOS研究站Melpitz参考站点相比,在Melpitz中心观测到明显的过量污染。在适当的风向下,测定了燃烧PM组分有机碳、元素碳、左旋葡聚糖和苯并[a]芘的局部浓度增量,其冬季平均值分别为0.7 μg m-3、0.3 μg m-3、0.1 μg m-3和0.4 ng m-3,相对于区域背景浓度分别增加了24%、70%、61%和107%。村庄增量的年、周、日分布表明,住宅供暖是这种过度污染的主要来源,主要来自木材燃烧。使用正矩阵分解的受体模型量化了村庄现场4.5 μg m-3的木材燃烧PM,比2.6 μg m-3的区域背景木材燃烧PM增加了1.9 μg m-3,增加了约75%。该增量随季节、温度、边界层高度的变化而变化,在不利气象条件下可达4 ~ 6 μg - m-3的日平均值。对潜在的健康影响进行了估计,结果显示,在梅尔皮茨观察到的木材烟雾水平相似的地区,短期接触木材燃烧PM造成的全因死亡率为每10万居民每年2.1例。多环芳烃浓度造成的过量癌症风险为每10万人6.4人。对于这两项卫生指标,村庄本身的本地贡献约为40-50%,表明通过地方规模的政策有很大的缓解潜力。文献数据汇编表明,木材燃烧是德国PM污染的主要来源,冬季平均贡献10-20%。本研究量化了农村居民区用木材取暖的负面影响,这些地区通常缺乏对空气质量的持续监测。为了保护人类健康,有必要对这一PM来源进行进一步监管。
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来源期刊
ACS Environmental Au
ACS Environmental Au 环境科学-
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: ACS Environmental Au is an open access journal which publishes experimental research and theoretical results in all aspects of environmental science and technology both pure and applied. Short letters comprehensive articles reviews and perspectives are welcome in the following areas:Alternative EnergyAnthropogenic Impacts on Atmosphere Soil or WaterBiogeochemical CyclingBiomass or Wastes as ResourcesContaminants in Aquatic and Terrestrial EnvironmentsEnvironmental Data ScienceEcotoxicology and Public HealthEnergy and ClimateEnvironmental Modeling Processes and Measurement Methods and TechnologiesEnvironmental Nanotechnology and BiotechnologyGreen ChemistryGreen Manufacturing and EngineeringRisk assessment Regulatory Frameworks and Life-Cycle AssessmentsTreatment and Resource Recovery and Waste Management
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