Cargando…

Reactive organic carbon emissions from volatile chemical products

Volatile chemical products (VCPs) are an increasingly important source of anthropogenic reactive organic carbon (ROC) emissions. Among these sources are everyday items, such as personal care products, general cleaners, architectural coatings, pesticides, adhesives, and printing inks. Here, we develo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Seltzer, Karl M., Pennington, Elyse, Rao, Venkatesh, Murphy, Benjamin N., Strum, Madeleine, Isaacs, Kristin K., Pye, Havala O. T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8193795/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34122530
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-5079-2021
_version_ 1783706299081424896
author Seltzer, Karl M.
Pennington, Elyse
Rao, Venkatesh
Murphy, Benjamin N.
Strum, Madeleine
Isaacs, Kristin K.
Pye, Havala O. T.
author_facet Seltzer, Karl M.
Pennington, Elyse
Rao, Venkatesh
Murphy, Benjamin N.
Strum, Madeleine
Isaacs, Kristin K.
Pye, Havala O. T.
author_sort Seltzer, Karl M.
collection PubMed
description Volatile chemical products (VCPs) are an increasingly important source of anthropogenic reactive organic carbon (ROC) emissions. Among these sources are everyday items, such as personal care products, general cleaners, architectural coatings, pesticides, adhesives, and printing inks. Here, we develop VCPy, a new framework to model organic emissions from VCPs throughout the United States, including spatial allocation to regional and local scales. Evaporation of a species from a VCP mixture in the VCPy framework is a function of the compound-specific physiochemical properties that govern volatilization and the timescale relevant for product evaporation. We introduce two terms to describe these processes: evaporation timescale and use timescale. Using this framework, predicted national per capita organic emissions from VCPs are 9.5 kg per person per year (6.4 kg C per person per year) for 2016, which translates to 3.05 Tg (2.06 Tg C), making VCPs a dominant source of anthropogenic organic emissions in the United States. Uncertainty associated with this framework and sensitivity to select parameters were characterized through Monte Carlo analysis, resulting in a 95 % confidence interval of national VCP emissions for 2016 of 2.61–3.53 Tg (1.76–2.38 Tg C). This nationwide total is broadly consistent with the U.S. EPA’s 2017 National Emission Inventory (NEI); however, county-level and categorical estimates can differ substantially from NEI values. VCPy predicts higher VCP emissions than the NEI for approximately half of all counties, with 5 % of all counties having greater than 55 % higher emissions. Categorically, application of the VCPy framework yields higher emissions for personal care products (150 %) and paints and coatings (25 %) when compared to the NEI, whereas pesticides (−54 %) and printing inks (−13 %) feature lower emissions. An observational evaluation indicates emissions of key species from VCPs are reproduced with high fidelity using the VCPy framework (normalized mean bias of −13 % with r =0.95). Sector-wide, the effective secondary organic aerosol yield and maximum incremental reactivity of VCPs are 5.3 % by mass and 1.58 gO(3) g(−1), respectively, indicating VCPs are an important, and likely to date underrepresented, source of secondary pollution in urban environments.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8193795
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-81937952022-03-31 Reactive organic carbon emissions from volatile chemical products Seltzer, Karl M. Pennington, Elyse Rao, Venkatesh Murphy, Benjamin N. Strum, Madeleine Isaacs, Kristin K. Pye, Havala O. T. Atmos Chem Phys Article Volatile chemical products (VCPs) are an increasingly important source of anthropogenic reactive organic carbon (ROC) emissions. Among these sources are everyday items, such as personal care products, general cleaners, architectural coatings, pesticides, adhesives, and printing inks. Here, we develop VCPy, a new framework to model organic emissions from VCPs throughout the United States, including spatial allocation to regional and local scales. Evaporation of a species from a VCP mixture in the VCPy framework is a function of the compound-specific physiochemical properties that govern volatilization and the timescale relevant for product evaporation. We introduce two terms to describe these processes: evaporation timescale and use timescale. Using this framework, predicted national per capita organic emissions from VCPs are 9.5 kg per person per year (6.4 kg C per person per year) for 2016, which translates to 3.05 Tg (2.06 Tg C), making VCPs a dominant source of anthropogenic organic emissions in the United States. Uncertainty associated with this framework and sensitivity to select parameters were characterized through Monte Carlo analysis, resulting in a 95 % confidence interval of national VCP emissions for 2016 of 2.61–3.53 Tg (1.76–2.38 Tg C). This nationwide total is broadly consistent with the U.S. EPA’s 2017 National Emission Inventory (NEI); however, county-level and categorical estimates can differ substantially from NEI values. VCPy predicts higher VCP emissions than the NEI for approximately half of all counties, with 5 % of all counties having greater than 55 % higher emissions. Categorically, application of the VCPy framework yields higher emissions for personal care products (150 %) and paints and coatings (25 %) when compared to the NEI, whereas pesticides (−54 %) and printing inks (−13 %) feature lower emissions. An observational evaluation indicates emissions of key species from VCPs are reproduced with high fidelity using the VCPy framework (normalized mean bias of −13 % with r =0.95). Sector-wide, the effective secondary organic aerosol yield and maximum incremental reactivity of VCPs are 5.3 % by mass and 1.58 gO(3) g(−1), respectively, indicating VCPs are an important, and likely to date underrepresented, source of secondary pollution in urban environments. 2021-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC8193795/ /pubmed/34122530 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-5079-2021 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
spellingShingle Article
Seltzer, Karl M.
Pennington, Elyse
Rao, Venkatesh
Murphy, Benjamin N.
Strum, Madeleine
Isaacs, Kristin K.
Pye, Havala O. T.
Reactive organic carbon emissions from volatile chemical products
title Reactive organic carbon emissions from volatile chemical products
title_full Reactive organic carbon emissions from volatile chemical products
title_fullStr Reactive organic carbon emissions from volatile chemical products
title_full_unstemmed Reactive organic carbon emissions from volatile chemical products
title_short Reactive organic carbon emissions from volatile chemical products
title_sort reactive organic carbon emissions from volatile chemical products
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8193795/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34122530
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-5079-2021
work_keys_str_mv AT seltzerkarlm reactiveorganiccarbonemissionsfromvolatilechemicalproducts
AT penningtonelyse reactiveorganiccarbonemissionsfromvolatilechemicalproducts
AT raovenkatesh reactiveorganiccarbonemissionsfromvolatilechemicalproducts
AT murphybenjaminn reactiveorganiccarbonemissionsfromvolatilechemicalproducts
AT strummadeleine reactiveorganiccarbonemissionsfromvolatilechemicalproducts
AT isaacskristink reactiveorganiccarbonemissionsfromvolatilechemicalproducts
AT pyehavalaot reactiveorganiccarbonemissionsfromvolatilechemicalproducts