ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY 119
One of the principal goals of air-pollution research is to
obtain and use our detailed knowledge of emissions, topogra-
phy, meteorology, and chemistry to develop a mathematical
model that is capable of predicting concentrations of primary
and secondary pollutants as a function of time at various loca-
tions throughout the modeling domain. These model results
would be validated by comparison with ambient-air-monitor-
ing data. Model refinement continues until there is acceptable
agreement between the observed and predicted concentra-
tions. This type of air-quality model, on an urban scale, is
called an airshed model. Airshed models treat the effects of
a set of stationary and mobile sources scattered throughout a
relatively small geographical area (100 km^2 ). These models
are intended to calculate concentrations of pollutants within
this geographical area and immediately downwind.
It is also necessary to develop a detailed knowledge of the
impacts of pollutants on the various important receptors, such
as humans, plants, and materials. This impact information
is used to identify the pollutants that need to be controlled.
An airshed model can be used to predict the effectiveness
of various proposed control strategies. This information can
be passed on to legislative authorities, who can evaluate the
costs and benefits of the various strategies and legislate the
best control measures.
Unfortunately, there are significant gaps in our knowledge
at every step throughout this idealized air-pollution system.
Sources
Emissions of
Anthropogenic, Biogenic, Geogenic
Primary Pollutants e.g.
VOC, NOx, SO 2 , CO, PM10,2.5, HAPs
Dispersion
and
Transport
Chemical and Physical
Transformations
Scientific Risk Assessment
Effects:
Health and
Environmental
Exposure
Monitoring
FATES
Wet and Dry
Deposition
Transport to Stratosphere
Stratospheric Chemistry,
Ozone Depletion
Models
Local “Hot-Spot”
Plume, Airshed,
Long-range
Transport,
Global
Risk Management Decisions
Air Pollution Control
Impacts on Receptors
(Humans, Animals,
Agricultural Crops
Forest and Aquatic
Ecosystems, Visibility,
Materials, etc.)
Long-Lived Species
e.g. CFC, N 2 O
Ambient Air
Urban, Suburban,
Rural. Remote, O 3 ,
Acids, Toxics. PM10,2.5 etc.
FIGURE 1 The atmospheric air-pollution system. From Finlayson-Pitts and Pitts (2000). (HAPs—
hazardous air pollutants). With permission.
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