Seasonal size distribution and possible health implications of atmospheric aerosols collected from a rural site of eastern central India
2016
Nirmalkar, Jayant | Deshmukh, Dhananjay K. | Deb, Manas K. | Chandrawanshi, Swati | Tiwari, Swapnil
This paper contributes for the first time the seasonal mass size distribution of atmospheric aerosols and their possible health implications in a rural area of eastern central India. Size-segregated atmospheric aerosols were collected from July 2012 to June 2013 at rural site near Mahanadi riverside basin of Rajim (20° 59′N and 81°55′E), Chhattisgarh, India using nine-stage cascade impactor. Bimodal size distribution was found with stable peaks at 0.4–0.7 μm (fine mode) and 4.4–5.8 μm (coarse mode) during monsoon, winter, spring and summer seasons at study site. The mass median aerodynamic diameter of total impactor particle sizes was shifted from lower particle size in winter to higher particle size in summer. High concentrations of size-segregated aerosols were found during winter season with 45%, 55% and 36% of PM2.5–10, PM2.5 and PM1, respectively of the total PM10 aerosol. One unique observation was that the mass concentration of particulate matter increases abruptly in May and June during summer season, which was due to in situ burning of rice crop residues. The concentrations of upper respiratory tract and lungs particles were found to be highest during winter whereas respiratory airways particles showed maxima during summer season. The highest numbers of unfavorable days (i.e. value of air quality index > 101) were also observed during winter followed by summer season. The significant positive correlations found among particle in fine size bins (<0.43–2.5 μm) during winter and summer season was mainly due to the biomass burning activities during the study period at a rural site in eastern central India.
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