Spatio-temporal exposure assessment of particulate matter pollution in auto-rickshaw drivers in Chennai, India


Journal article


Aswin Giri J., Shiva Nagendra S.M.
Atmospheric Pollution Research, vol. 14, 2023, p. 101933


Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
J., A. G., & S.M., S. N. (2023). Spatio-temporal exposure assessment of particulate matter pollution in auto-rickshaw drivers in Chennai, India. Atmospheric Pollution Research, 14, 101933. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apr.2023.101933


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
J., Aswin Giri, and Shiva Nagendra S.M. β€œSpatio-Temporal Exposure Assessment of Particulate Matter Pollution in Auto-Rickshaw Drivers in Chennai, India.” Atmospheric Pollution Research 14 (2023): 101933.


MLA   Click to copy
J., Aswin Giri, and Shiva Nagendra S.M. β€œSpatio-Temporal Exposure Assessment of Particulate Matter Pollution in Auto-Rickshaw Drivers in Chennai, India.” Atmospheric Pollution Research, vol. 14, 2023, p. 101933, doi:10.1016/j.apr.2023.101933.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{j2023a,
  title = {Spatio-temporal exposure assessment of particulate matter pollution in auto-rickshaw drivers in Chennai, India},
  year = {2023},
  journal = {Atmospheric Pollution Research},
  pages = {101933},
  volume = {14},
  doi = {10.1016/j.apr.2023.101933},
  author = {J., Aswin Giri and S.M., Shiva Nagendra}
}

Abstract

Rapid urbanization and population growth have put a lot of stress on the urban infrastructure. The number of vehicles, particularly the three wheeled auto-rickshaws, have increased drastically in the past decade in developing countries like India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, etc. The distinct design of these vehicles make the drivers and the passengers vulnerable to the traffic emissions and resuspended dust. With the objective of assessing the exposure of auto-rickshaw drivers to particulate matter in Chennai, this study used an auto-rickshaw to monitor the particulate matter (𝑃𝑀10, 𝑃𝑀2.5 and 𝑃𝑀1 ) concentrations during weekday peak and non-peak hours, across 15 administrative zones of Chennai, India. The particle size distribution profile for each zone was identified to understand the source contribution. Low 𝑃𝑀2.5βˆ•π‘ƒπ‘€10 ratio (<0.15) was observed in the western parts of Chennai consisting residential and commercial zones (zone 10 and 11), and high 𝑃𝑀1βˆ•π‘ƒπ‘€2.5 ratio (>0.8) in the highly industrialized northern parts of Chennai (zone 4 and 5). The coarse particles of size 31 ΞΌm and 34 ΞΌm were predominant in most of the zones. Northern and central Chennai had 100 % exceedances in 𝑃𝑀10 and 𝑃𝑀2.5 during both peak and non-peak hour. Auto-rickshaw drivers were exposed to a maximum of 4.26 ΞΌgβˆ•km and 0.12 ΞΌgβˆ•km of 𝑃𝑀2.5 and 𝑃𝑀1, respectively. Based on these results, we suggest the auto-rickshaw drivers and passengers to follow necessary precautions like wearing masks, and the policymakers to develop control measures based on such spatial studies of air pollution across the entire city.Β 
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