Abstract
The short time-scale variability in pollutant concentrations in an urban street under very low wind speed conditions and short source-receptor distance has been investigated using the inert tracer sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) as a continuous point-source (release times ≥ 5 min), and fast detection using separation by gas chromatography coupled with a μ-electron capture detector (ECD). The results are complex but can be broadly interpreted in terms of horizontal wind speed and direction coherence. Comparisons with a simple dispersion model suggest that observed time-averaged maximum concentrations approach predicted values, whilst instantaneous maximum concentrations vary greatly and would therefore be difficult to predict. © 2008 Royal Meteorological Society.
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Martin, D., Price, C. S., White, I. R., Nickless, G., Dobre, A., & Shallcross, D. E. (2008). A study of pollutant concentration variability in an urban street under low wind speeds. Atmospheric Science Letters, 9(3), 147–152. https://doi.org/10.1002/asl.184
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