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Zhihua (Tina) Fan Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute Sponsored by RWJMS-UMDNJ and Rutgers University Piscataway, NJ NUATRC Air Toxics.

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Presentation on theme: "Zhihua (Tina) Fan Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute Sponsored by RWJMS-UMDNJ and Rutgers University Piscataway, NJ NUATRC Air Toxics."— Presentation transcript:

1 Zhihua (Tina) Fan Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute Sponsored by RWJMS-UMDNJ and Rutgers University Piscataway, NJ NUATRC Air Toxics Workshop II Spatial Variation of Air Toxics in a “Hot Spot”: Camden in New Jersey June 12-13, 2007

2 Gaps in Understanding Health Effects of Air Toxics  Exposure to air toxics and associated health risks in “hot spots” may be under-estimated based on routine ambient air monitoring program.  Limited ambient concentration and personal exposure data of air toxics in community level  Limited spatial variation data of air toxics.

3 Objectives of the Main Study  To characterize local ambient and personal concentrations of air toxics in a suspected “hotspot” - the Village of Waterfront South (WFS) neighborhood in Camden, NJ.  To assess the impact of local industrial and mobile sources on measured neighborhood ambient concentrations and personal exposures in the WFS.

4 Background Information about the WFS  Mixed Sources of Air Toxics and high density of local emission sources  High asthma incidence rate  High carcinogenic risk predicted by NATA  Low socioeconomic-status residents

5 Local Emission Sources of Air Pollutants  Industrial sources A total of 26 industrial and manufacturing facilities, e.g. Camden sewage treatment plant, recycling factory, St. Lawrence Cement Company, Camden Iron and Metal, etc.  Mobile sources  Local diesel truck traffic: >100,000 trucks/year travel through this community.  HYW 676 and major roads  Urban Sources Philadelphia (~ 20 miles west of WFS)

6 Industrial Facilities in WFS

7 HWY 676 (Left) and Sewage Treatment Plants (right)

8 WFS (60 subjects) winter summer weekday weekend weekday weekend CDS (40 subjects) winter summer weekdayweekend weekday weekend Neighborhood Ambient and Personal Measurements 24-h outdoor and personal samples Four types of air toxic substances ( small particles, Volatile Organic Compounds, carbonyls, & Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (soot)) Baseline and Activity questionnaires and Time/Activity Diaries Modeling approach Main Study Design

9 Study Areas in Camden, NJ : the fixed sampling sites CDS - Reference area WFS – Hot Spot

10 Objectives of the Spatial Variation Study  To characterize the spatial variation of air toxics in WFS and CDS.  To conduct accurate assessment of the impact of local sources on ambient neighborhood levels of and personal exposure to air toxics.  To identify the major sources of air toxics in the WFS.

11 “Saturation Sampling” - Detailed Spatial Measurements of Air Toxics Outdoors  A total of 38 locations were selected as sampling sites for the “saturation sampling” study. 22 in the WFS and 16 in the CDS  Sampling duration: 24 and 48 hours  Two summer and one winter sampling campaigns  Target compounds VOCs (3M OVM badge) Carbonyls (PAKS)

12 VOCsAldehydes 1,3-ButadieneFormaldehyde BenzeneAcetaldehyde Carbon tetrachlorideAcrolein Chloroform Ethyl benzene Methyl-tert-butyl-ether (MTBE) Styrene Toluene Styrene Xylenes Target Compounds

13 “Saturation Sampling” Sites Fixed Site

14 VOC and Carbonyl Samplers Placed at the “Saturation Sampling” Sites

15 Spatial Distribution of Toluene (g/m 3 ) (Aug. 17-18, 2005) PINTO BROTHERS RECYCLING. Inc.

16 Toluene Concentration Downwind of the Facility (Aug. 17-18, 2005)

17 Spatial Distribution of Toluene (g/m 3 ) (07/20-22 and 12/21-23, 2005)

18 Outdoor Toluene Levels Obtained from Main Study (g/m 3 )

19 Spatial Distribution of MTBE (g/m 3 )

20 Outdoor MTBE Levels Obtained from Main Study (g/m 3 ) CDS WFS

21 Spatial Distribution of Benzene (g/m 3 )

22 Correlation Coefficients (R 2 ) between MTBE and BETX

23 Spatial Distribution of Formaldehyde (g/m 3 )

24 Summary  Hot spots for MTBE and aromatic VOCs were observed in WFS, indicating the contribution of local stationary sources of these compounds to the ambient neighborhood air pollution.  The major impact of emissions from the stationary sources was observed downwind but within 300 m of the facility.

25 Summary-cont’d  Formaldehyde levels were found high in both areas, indicating significant impact of diesel emissions on the ambient formaldehyde air pollution in both WFS and CDS.  The small spatial variation of all the target compounds and high correlation between MTBE and BETX indicated mobile sources are the contributors to ambient air pollution in CDS.

26 Implications  For Air Toxic problems, “saturation sampling” and/or personal monitoring are recommended for examining the impact of industrial or other major local sources on community air pollution and potential personal exposure.  The spatial variation study can  Better define the population at high exposure risks in hot spot areas.  Identify the major air toxics sources of concerns.  Aid in developing effective controlling strategies to reduce community exposure to air toxics.

27 Acknowledgments  Investigators at EOHSI: P. Lioy, S.W. Wang, P. Georgopoulos, J. Zhang, and P. Ohman-Strickland  Staff and students at EOHSI: X. Zhu, X. Wu, Q. Meng, J. Herrington, KH. Jung, X. Tang, and M. Rodriguez.  Collaborator at the NJ DEP: L. Bonanno  This study is supported solely by the Health Effects Institute (HEI Agreement Number: 4703- RFA03-1/03-15 ).


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