Environment International (Oct 2022)

Cokriging with a low-cost sensor network to estimate spatial variation of brake and tire-wear metals and oxidative stress potential in Southern California

  • Jonathan Liu,
  • Sudipto Banerjee,
  • Farzan Oroumiyeh,
  • Jiaqi Shen,
  • Irish del Rosario,
  • Jonah Lipsitt,
  • Suzanne Paulson,
  • Beate Ritz,
  • Jason Su,
  • Scott Weichenthal,
  • Pascale Lakey,
  • Manabu Shiraiwa,
  • Yifang Zhu,
  • Michael Jerrett

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 168
p. 107481

Abstract

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Due to regulations and technological advancements reducing tailpipe emissions, an increasing proportion of emissions arise from brake and tire wear particulate matter (PM). PM from these non-tailpipe sources contains heavy metals capable of generating oxidative stress in the lung. Although important, these particles remain understudied because the high cost of actively collecting filter samples. Improvements in electrical engineering, internet connectivity, and an increased public concern over air pollution have led to a proliferation of dense low-cost air sensor networks such as the PurpleAir monitors, which primarily measure unspeciated fine particulate matter (PM2.5). In this study, we model the concentrations of Ba, Zn, black carbon, reactive oxygen species concentration in the epithelial lining fluid, dithiothreitol (DTT) loss, and OH formation. We use a cokriging approach, incorporating data from the PurpleAir network as a secondary predictor variable and a land-use regression (LUR) as an external drift. For most pollutant species, cokriging models produced more accurate predictions than an LUR model, which did not incorporate data from the PurpleAir monitors. This finding suggests that low-cost sensors can enhance predictions of pollutants that are costly to measure extensively in the field.

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