分摊
环境科学
社会经济地位
空气污染
环境卫生
微粒
气溶胶
环境工程
环境化学
大气科学
地理
人口
化学
气象学
医学
物理
有机化学
法学
政治学
作者
Jiaqi Shen,Sina Taghvaee,Chris La,Farzan Oroumiyeh,Jonathan Liu,Michael Jerrett,Scott Weichenthal,Irish Del Rosario,Martin M. Shafer,Beate Ritz,Yifang Zhu,Suzanne E. Paulson
标识
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.2c02788
摘要
Oxidative potential (OP) has been proposed as a possible integrated metric for particles smaller than 2.5 μm in diameter (PM2.5) to evaluate adverse health outcomes associated with particulate air pollution exposure. Here, we investigate how OP depends on sources and chemical composition and how OP varies by land use type and neighborhood socioeconomic position in the Los Angeles area. We measured OH formation (OPOH), dithiothreitol loss (OPDTT), black carbon, and 52 metals and elements for 54 total PM2.5 samples collected in September 2019 and February 2020. The Positive Matrix Factorization source apportionment model identified four sources contributing to volume-normalized OPOH: vehicular exhaust, brake and tire wear, soil and road dust, and mixed secondary and marine. Exhaust emissions contributed 42% of OPOH, followed by 21% from brake and tire wear. Similar results were observed for the OPDTT source apportionment. Furthermore, by linking measured PM2.5 and OP with census tract level socioeconomic and health outcome data provided by CalEnviroScreen, we found that the most disadvantaged neighborhoods were exposed to both the most toxic particles and the highest particle concentrations. OPOH exhibited the largest inverse social gradients, followed by OPDTT and PM2.5 mass. Finally, OPOH was the metric most strongly correlated with adverse health outcome indicators.
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