Journal of the Serbian Chemical Society (Jan 2015)
Evaluation of optimization methods for solving the receptor model for chemical mass balance
Abstract
Balance (CMB) model has been extensively used in order to determine source contribution for particulate matters (size diameters less than 10 μm and 2.5 μm) in the air quality analysis. A comparison of the source contribution estimated from the three CMB models (CMB 8.2, CMB-fmincon and CMB-GA) have been carried out through optimization techniques such as ‘fmincon’ (CMB-fmincon) and genetic algorithm (CMB-GA) using MATLAB. The proposed approach has been validated using San Joaquin Valley Air Quality Study (SJVAQS) California Fresno and Bakersfield PM10 and PM2.5 followed with Oregon PM10 data. The source contribution estimated from CMB-GA was better in source interpretation in comparison with CMB8.2 and CMB-fmincon. The performance accuracy of three CMB approaches were validated using R-square, reduced chi-square and percentage mass tests. The R-square (0.90, 0.67 and 0.81, 0.83), Chi-square (0.36, 0.66 and 0.65, 0.43) and percentage mass (67.36 %, 55.03 % and 94.24 %, 74.85 %) of CMB-GA showed high correlation for PM10, PM2.5 Fresno and Bakersfield data respectively. To make a complete decision, the proposed methodology has been bench marked with Portland, Oregon PM10 data with best fit with R2 (0.99), Chi-square (1.6) and percentage mass (94.4 %) from CMB-GA. Therefore, the study revealed that CMB with genetic algorithm optimization method holds better stability in determining the source contributions.
Keywords