Spatial and temporal variation of façade-level particle number concentrations using portable monitors in Copenhagen, Denmark

Environ Pollut. 2024 Nov 26:365:125398. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2024.125398. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Ultrafine particles (UFP), commonly expressed as particle number concentrations (PNC), have been associated with harm to human health yet are currently not regulated or routinely monitored in many places. This has limited the potential for studies of health effects of long-term exposure to UFP. The present study aims to understand the spatial and temporal variation in façade-level UFP exposures in Copenhagen, Denmark. We measured PNC at the façades of 27 residences across the city for approximately 72 h each in two campaigns and continuously at an urban background reference site for twelve consecutive months, using portable monitors (miniature diffusion size classifiers [DiSCminis]). We estimated annual means at the residential sites based on temporal adjustment using reference site data. Furthermore, we co-located the DiSCminis at a regulatory monitoring station on three occasions and compared daily means from our reference site to those from seven fixed-site monitoring stations throughout the city. Annual mean PNC at the reference site was 4715 (SD of hourly mean: 3001) pt/cm3, while annual means at 27 residences were slightly higher with a mean of 5201 pt/cm3 (SD: 807), ranging between 3735 and 6588 pt/cm3. The two individual adjusted campaign-specific means at 27 residential sites were weakly correlated (Spearman's correlation 0.11) and had an intra-class correlation coefficient of 0.06 (95%-confidence interval: -0.18, 0.28). Daily PNC at the reference site was highly correlated (R = 0.64-0.84) with PNC monitored at seven fixed-site stations throughout the city. We observed a seasonal trend at the reference site with the highest PNC in spring. Our measurement campaign revealed that façade-level PNC at residences in Copenhagen in 2021-2022 was relatively low with small spatial variability. The large variability in time suggests possibly longer and more frequent measurement campaigns to obtain more stable annual averages. Our study illustrates the challenges of UFP long-term exposure assessment.

Keywords: Air pollution; Exposure assessment; Particle number concentration; Ultrafine particles.