Air quality in the German–Czech border region: A focus on harmful fractions of PM and ultrafine particles

2015 
Abstract A comprehensive air quality study has been carried out at two urban background sites in Annaberg-Buchholz (Germany) and Usti nad Labem (Czech Republic) in the German–Czech border region between January 2012 and June 2014. Special attention was paid to quantify harmful fractions of particulate matter (PM) and ultrafine particle number concentration (UFP) from solid fuel combustion and vehicular traffic. Source type contributions of UFP were quantified by using the daily concentration courses of UFP and nitrogen oxide. Two different source apportionment techniques were used to quantify relative and absolute mass contributions: positive matrix factorization for total PM 2.5 and elemental carbon in PM 2.5 and chemical mass balance for total PM 1 and organic carbon in PM 1 . Contributions from solid fuel combustion strongly differed between the non-heating period (April–September) and the heating period (October–March). Major sources of solid fuel combustion in this study were wood and domestic coal combustion, while the proportion of industrial coal combustion was low (
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