WASCAL Academia Repository

Particle and VOC emission factor measurements for anthropogenic sources in West Africa

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Keita, Sekou
dc.contributor.author Liousse, Cathy
dc.contributor.author Yoboué, Véronique
dc.contributor.author Dominutti, Pamela
dc.contributor.author Guinot, Benjamin
dc.contributor.author Assamoi, Eric-Michel
dc.contributor.author Borbon, Agnès
dc.contributor.author Haslett, Sophie L.
dc.date.accessioned 2023-01-27T15:45:11Z
dc.date.available 2023-01-27T15:45:11Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.identifier.other https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-18-7691-2018
dc.identifier.uri http://197.159.135.214/jspui/handle/123456789/718
dc.description Research Article en_US
dc.description.abstract A number of campaigns have been carried out to establish the emission factors of pollutants from fuel combustion in West Africa, as part of work package 2 (“Air Pollution and Health”) of the DACCIWA (Dynamics-Aerosol- Chemistry-Cloud Interactions in West Africa) FP7 program. Emission sources considered here include wood (hevea and iroko) and charcoal burning, charcoal making, open trash burning, and vehicle emissions, including trucks, cars, buses and two-wheeled vehicles. Emission factors of total particulate matter (TPM), elemental carbon (EC), primary organic carbon (OC) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) have been established. In addition, emission factor measurements were performed in combustion chambers in order to reproduce field burning conditions for a tropical hardwood (hevea), and obtain particulate emission factors by size (PM0:25, PM1, PM2:5 and PM10). Particle samples were collected on quartz fiber filters and analyzed using gravimetric method for TPM and thermal methods for EC and OC. The emission factors of 58 VOC species were determined using offline sampling on a sorbent tube. Emission factor results for two species of tropical hardwood burning of EC, OC and TPM are 0.98 0.46 g kg􀀀1 of fuel burned (g kg􀀀1), 11.05 4.55 and 41.12 24.62 g kg􀀀1, respectively. For traffic sources, the highest emission factors among particulate species are found for the two-wheeled vehicles with two-stroke engines (2.74 g kg􀀀1 fuel for EC, 65.11 g kg􀀀1 fuel for OC and 496 g kg􀀀1 fuel for TPM). The largest VOC emissions are observed for two-stroke two-wheeled vehicles, which are up to 3 times higher than emissions from light-duty and heavyduty vehicles. Isoprene and monoterpenes, which are usually associated with biogenic emissions, are present in almost all anthropogenic sources investigated during this work and could be as significant as aromatic emissions in wood burning (1 g kg􀀀1 fuel). EC is primarily emitted in the ultrafine fraction, with 77% of the total mass being emitted as particles smaller than 0.25 μm. The particles and VOC emission factors obtained in this study are generally higher than those in the literature whose values are discussed in this paper. This study underlines the important role of in situ measurements in deriving realistic and representative emission factors. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics en_US
dc.title Particle and VOC emission factor measurements for anthropogenic sources in West Africa en_US
dc.type Article en_US


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search WASCAL Academia


Browse

My Account