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- Title
Finding candidate locations for aerosol pollution monitoring at street level using a data-driven methodology.
- Authors
Moosavi, V.; Aschwanden, G.; Velasco, E.
- Abstract
Finding the number and significant locations of fixed air quality monitoring stations at ground level is challenging because of the complexity of the urban environment and the large number of factors affecting the pollutants concentration. Datasets of urban parameters such as land use, building morphology and street geometry in high resolution grid cells in combination with direct measurements of airborne pollutants in high frequency (1-10 s) along a reasonable number of streets can be used to interpolate concentration of pollutants in a whole gridded domain and determine the optimum number of monitoring sites and best locations for a network of fixed monitors at ground level. In this context, a data-driven modeling methodology is developed based on the application of Self Organizing Map (SOM) to approximate the nonlinear relations between urban parameters (80 in this work) and aerosol pollution data, such as mass and number concentrations measured along streets of a commercial/residential neighborhood of Singapore. Cross-validations between measured and predicted aerosol concentrations based on the urban parameters at each individual grid cell showed satisfying results. The urban parameters used in this case proved to be an appropriate indirect measure of aerosol concentrations within the studied area. The potential locations for fixed air quality monitors are identified through clustering of areas (i.e. group of cells) with similar urban patterns. The typological center of each cluster corresponds to the most representative cell for all other cells in the cluster. In the studied neighborhood four different clusters were identified and for each cluster potential sites for air quality monitoring at ground level are identified.
- Subjects
AIR quality; URBAN ecology (Sociology); POLLUTANTS; ZONING; ATMOSPHERIC aerosols
- Publication
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Discussions, 2015, Vol 8, Issue 3, p3321
- ISSN
1867-8610
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5194/amtd-8-3321-2015