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ENGLISH ABSTRACT
JOURNAL ARTICLE
[Source Apportionment and Heath Risk Quantification of Heavy Metals in PM 2.5 in Yangzhou, China].
Huan Jing Ke Xue= Huanjing Kexue 2019 Februrary 9
Recently, a new method combining positive matrix factorization (PMF) and heavy metal health risk (HMHR) assessment was proposed to apportion sources of heavy metals in ambient particulate matter and the associated heavy metal cancer health risk (HMCR), which has been applied to data collected in Yangzhou, China. The annual average concentrations of six measured heavy metals were Pb (64.4 ng·m-3 ), followed by Cr (25.24 ng·m-3 ), As (6.36 ng·m-3 ), Ni (5.36 ng·m-3 ), Cd (3.34 ng·m-3 ), and Co (1.21 ng·m-3 ). The results showed that the major sources of PM2.5 were secondary sources (37.7%), followed by coal combustion (19.4%), resuspended dust (17.5%), vehicle emissions (16.9%), construction dust (5.2%), and industrial emissions (3.4%). As was primarily emitted from coal combustion, vehicle emissions, and resuspended dust. Co originated from industry emissions. Pb was mainly emitted from coal combustion. Ni and Cd were from industrial emissions. The major sources that contributed to HMCR were resuspended dust, coal combustion, vehicle emissions, industry emissions, and construction dust. The high contributions of resuspended dust and coal to HMCR were likely due to the high heavy metals concentrations in coal and the resuspended dust profile as well as high emissions of these sources.
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