Science Inventory

Summary of PM2.5 Measurement Artifacts Associated with the Teledyne T640 PM Mass Monitor Under Controlled Chamber Experimental Conditions Using Polydisperse Ammonium Sulfate Aerosols and Biomass Smoke.

Citation:

Long, R., S. Urbanski, E. Lincoln, M. Colon, S. Kaushik, J. Krug, R. Vanderpool, AND M. Landis. Summary of PM2.5 Measurement Artifacts Associated with the Teledyne T640 PM Mass Monitor Under Controlled Chamber Experimental Conditions Using Polydisperse Ammonium Sulfate Aerosols and Biomass Smoke. JOURNAL OF THE AIR & WASTE MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION. Air & Waste Management Association, Pittsburgh, PA, , na, (2023). https://doi.org/10.1080/10962247.2023.2171156

Impact/Purpose:

The results detailed in this product will provide state and local air monitoring agencies with the tools and knowledge to address PM5 measurement challenges in areas frequently impact by wildland fire smoke. The observed large positive and negative artifacts in the T640 PM mass determination has the potential to result in false exceedances of the PM2.5 NAAQS or in the disqualification of monitoring data through an exceptional event designation.  In addition, the observed artifacts in smoke impacted air will have a detrimental effect on providing reliable public information when wildfires occur and also in identifying reference measurements for small sensor evaluation studies. Other PM2.5 FEMs such as the BAM-1022 perform better in smoke and are comparable to the filter based FRM.  Care must be taken in choosing high time resolution FEM monitors that will be operated at smoke impacted sites.  Accurate methods, such as the FRM and BAM-1022 will reduce the burden of developing and reviewing exceptional event request packages, data loss/disqualification, and provide states with tools to adequately evaluate public exposure risks and provide accurate public health messaging during wildfire/smoke events.

Description:

Particulate matter (PM) is a major primary pollutant emitted during wildland fires that has the potential to pose significant health risks to individuals/communities who live and work in areas impacted by smoke events. Limiting exposure is the principal measure available to mitigate health impacts of smoke and therefore the accurate determination of ambient PM concentrations during wildland fire events is critical to protecting public health. However, monitoring air pollutants in smoke impacted environments has proven challenging in that measurement interferences or sampling conditions can result in both positive and negative artifacts. The EPA has performed research on methods for the measurement of PM2.5 in a series of laboratory based studies including evaluation in smoke. This manuscript will summarize the results of the laboratory based evaluation of federal equivalent method (FEM) analyzers for PM2.5 with particular attention being given to the Teledyne-API Model T640 PM Mass analyzer, as compared to the filter-based federal reference method (FRM). The T640 is an optical-based PM analyzer and has been gaining wide use by state and local monitoring agencies in monitoring for PM2.5 U.S. National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) attainment. At present, the T640 (includes both T640 and T640X) comprises ~40% of the PM2.5 FEM monitors in U.S. regulatory monitoring networks. In addition, the T640 has increasingly been employed for the higher time resolution comparison/evaluation of low-cost PM sensors including during smoke impacted events. Results from controlled non-smoke laboratory studies using generated ammonium sulfate aerosols, demonstrated a generally negative T640 measurement artifact that was significantly related to the PM2.5 concentration and to particle size distribution. Results from biomass burning chamber studies demonstrated both positive and negative artifacts that were significantly related to PM2.5 concentration, particle size distribution, and optical wavelength dependent absorption properties of the smoke aerosol.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:03/13/2023
Record Last Revised:03/15/2023
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 357298