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Testing av renseefekt av fiber-polymerer for PCB-kontaminert vann

Davanger, Kirsten; Enge, Ellen Katrin; Schlabach, Martin

NILU

2020

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), oxy- and nitro-PAHs in ambient air of the Arctic town Longyearbyen, Svalbard

Drotikova, Titiana; Ali, Aasim Musa Mohamed; Halse, Anne Karine; Reinardy, Helena; Kallenborn, Roland

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are not
declining in Arctic air despite reductions in their global emissions.
In Svalbard, the Longyearbyen coal-fired power plant
is considered to be one of the major local sources of PAHs.
Power plant stack emissions and ambient air samples, collected
simultaneously at 1 km (UNIS) and 6 km (Adventdalen)
transect distance, were analysed (gaseous and particulate
phases separately) for 22 nitro-PAHs, 8 oxy-PAHs,
and 16 parent PAHs by gas chromatography in combination
with single quadrupole electron capture negative ionization
mass spectrometry (GC-ECNI-MS) and gas chromatography
in combination with triple quadrupole electron ionization
mass spectrometry (GC-EI-MS/MS). Results confirm low
levels of PAH emissions (Sum 16 PAHs D 1:5 μg/kg coal)
from the power plant. Phenanthrene, 9,10-anthraquinone, 9-
fluorenone, fluorene, fluoranthene, and pyrene accounted for
85% of the plant emission (not including naphthalene). A dilution
effect was observed for the transect ambient air samples:
1.26+/- 0.16 and 0.63+/- 0.14 ng/m3 were the sum of all
47 PAH derivatives for UNIS and Adventdalen, respectively.
The PAH profile was homogeneous for these recipient stations
with phenanthrene and 9-fluorenone being most abundant.
Multivariate statistical analysis confirmed coal combustion
and vehicle and marine traffic as the predominant
sources of PAHs. Secondary atmospheric formation of 9-
nitroanthracene and 2C3-nitrofluoranthene was evaluated
and concluded. PAHs partitioning between gaseous and particulate
phases showed a strong dependence on ambient temperatures
and humidity. The present study contributes important
data which can be utilized to eliminate uncertainties in
model predictions that aim to assess the extent and impacts
of Arctic atmospheric contaminants.

2020

Can statistics of turbulent tracer dispersion be inferred from camera observations of SO2 in the ultraviolet? A modelling study

Kylling, Arve; Ardeshiri, Hamidreza; Cassiani, Massimo; Dinger, Anna Solvejg; Park, Soon-Young; Pisso, Ignacio; Schmidbauer, Josef Norbert; Stebel, Kerstin; Stohl, Andreas

Atmospheric turbulence and in particular its effect on tracer dispersion may be measured by cameras sensitive to the absorption of ultraviolet (UV) sunlight by sulfur dioxide (SO2), a gas that can be considered a passive tracer over short transport distances. We present a method to simulate UV camera measurements of SO2 with a 3D Monte Carlo radiative transfer model which takes input from a large eddy simulation (LES) of a SO2 plume released from a point source. From the simulated images the apparent absorbance and various plume density statistics (centre-line position, meandering, absolute and relative dispersion, and skewness) were calculated. These were compared with corresponding quantities obtained directly from the LES. Mean differences of centre-line position, absolute and relative dispersions, and skewness between the simulated images and the LES were generally found to be smaller than or about the voxel resolution of the LES. Furthermore, sensitivity studies were made to quantify how changes in solar azimuth and zenith angles, aerosol loading (background and in plume), and surface albedo impact the UV camera image plume statistics. Changing the values of these parameters within realistic limits has negligible effects on the centre-line position, meandering, absolute and relative dispersions, and skewness of the SO2 plume. Thus, we demonstrate that UV camera images of SO2 plumes may be used to derive plume statistics of relevance for the study of atmospheric turbulent dispersion.

2020

Past and Future Grand Challenges in Marine Ecosystem Ecology

Borja, Angel; Andersen, Jesper H; Arvanitidis, Christos D.; Basset, Alberto; Buhl-Mortensen, Lene; Carvalho, Susana; Dafforn, Katherine A.; Devlin, Michelle J.; Escobar-Briones, Elva G.; Grenz, Christian; Harder, Tilmann; Katsanevakis, Stelios; Liu, Dongyan; Metaxas, Anna; Moran, Xose Anxelu G; Newton, Alice; Piroddi, Chiara; Pochon, Xavier; Queiros, Ana M.; Snelgrove, Paul V. R.; Solidoro, Cosimo; St. John, Michael A.; Teixeira, Heliana

Frontiers Media S.A.

2020

Spatiotemporal Analysis of Perfluoroalkyl Substances in White-Tailed Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla) Nestlings from Northern Norway-A Ten-Year Study

Jouanneau, William; Bårdsen, Bård-Jørgen; Herzke, Dorte; Johnsen, Trond Vidar; Eulaers, Igor; Bustnes, Jan Ove

The white-tailed eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla) in Scandinavia has suffered from impaired reproduction due to high exposure to industrial pollution between the 1960s and 1980s. While population numbers are rising again, new contaminants, such as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), are increasingly found in high trophic avifauna and are of concern to potentially impact once again on population health. In the present study, we examined PFAS levels in plasma of white-tailed eagle nestlings from northern Norway over the last decade (2008–2017). While PFOA and PFNA exposure did not follow a significant time trend, PFOS and PFHxS concentrations decreased over time, and ≥C11 perfluorinated carboxylic acids only seem to level off during the last four years. This may in fact be the first evidence for a change in the trend for some of these compounds. Furthermore, since several PFAS are expected to be highly present in aqueous film-forming foams used at airports, we also investigate the potential of the two main airports in the region to act as hotspots for PFAS. Our results indeed show decreasing exposure to PFOA with distance to the airports. Altogether, our results seem to show that legislation actions are effective, and continued concern for PFAS exposure of high trophic wildlife is still warranted, even in the northern environment.

2020

The SCCS guidance on the safety assessment of nanomaterials in cosmetics

Bernauer, Ulrike; Bodin, Laurent; Chaudhry, Qasim; Coenraads, Pieter Jan; Dusinska, Maria; Gaffet, Eric; Panteri, Eirini; Rogiers, Vera; Rousselle, Christophe; Stepnik, Maciej; Vanhaecke, Tamara; Wijnhoven, Susan; von Goetz, Natalie; de Jong, Wim H.; Simonnard, Alain

Elsevier

2020

The influence of residential wood combustion on the concentration of PM2.5 in four Nordic cities

Kukkonen, J.; Lopez-Aparicio, Susana; Segersson, D.; Geels, C; Kangas, Leena; Kauhaniemi, M; Maragkidou, Androniki; Jensen, A.; Assmuth, Timo; Karppinen, A; Sofiev, M; Hellén, Heidi; Riikonen, K.; Nikmo, Juha; Kousa, A.; Niemi, J. V.; Karvosenoja, N.; Sundvor, Ingrid; Sousa Santos, Gabriela; Im, U; Christensen, J. H.; Nielsen, O. K.; Plejdrup, M. S.; Nøjgaard, J.K.; Omstedt, G; Andersson, C.; Forsberg, B.; Brandt, J.

2020

Toward a unified terminology of processing levels for low-cost air-quality sensors

Schneider, Philipp; Bartonova, Alena; Castell, Nuria; Dauge, Franck Rene; Gerboles, Michel; Hagler, Gayle S. W.; Huglin, Christoph; Jones, Roderic L.; Khan, Sean; Lewis, Alastair C.; Mijling, Bas; Müller, Michael; Penza, Michele; Spinelle, Laurent; Stacey, Brian; Vogt, Matthias; Wesseling, Joost; Williams, Ronald W.

2020

An interdisciplinary view on air pollution and its impact on health and welfare in the Nordic countries

Geels, C; Andersen, M. S.; Andersson, C.; Christensen, J. H.; Forsberg, B; Frohn, LM; Gislason, T.; Hänninen, O.; Im, U; Jensen, A.; Karvosenoja, N.; Kukkonen, J.; Sofiev, M; Karppinen, A; Navrud, Ståle; Lehtomäki, H.; Lopez-Aparicio, Susana; Nielsen, O. K.; Raashcou-Nielsen, O.; Hvidtfeldt, U.; Strandell, A.; Paunu, Ville-Veikko; Pedersen, CB; Timmermann, A.; Plejdrup, M. S.; Schwarze, Per Everhard; Segersson, D.; Seifert-Dähnn, Isabel; Sigsgaard, T.; Thorsteinsson, T; Moss, A.; Vennemo, Haakon; Brandt, J.

Estimation of pollutant releases into the atmosphere is an important problem in the environmental sciences. It is typically formalized as an inverse problem using a linear model that can explain observable quantities (e.g., concentrations or deposition values) as a product of the source-receptor sensitivity (SRS) matrix obtained from an atmospheric transport model multiplied by the unknown source-term vector. Since this problem is typically ill-posed, current state-of-the-art methods are based on regularization of the problem and solution of a formulated optimization problem. This procedure depends on manual settings of uncertainties that are often very poorly quantified, effectively making them tuning parameters. We formulate a probabilistic model, that has the same maximum likelihood solution as the conventional method using pre-specified uncertainties. Replacement of the maximum likelihood solution by full Bayesian estimation also allows estimation of all tuning parameters from the measurements. The estimation procedure is based on the variational Bayes approximation which is evaluated by an iterative algorithm. The resulting method is thus very similar to the conventional approach, but with the possibility to also estimate all tuning parameters from the observations. The proposed algorithm is tested and compared with the standard methods on data from the European Tracer Experiment (ETEX) where advantages of the new method are demonstrated. A MATLAB implementation of the proposed algorithm is available for download.

2020

Mapping urban air quality using low-cost sensor networks

Schneider, Philipp; Castell, Nuria; Bartonova, Alena

2020

Evaluation of a city-scale forecast system for air quality in Hamburg

Karl, Matthias; Ramacher, Martin O. P.; Hamer, Paul David; Athanasopoulou, E.; Speyer, O.; Matthias, Volker

2020

Review on the methodology supporting the health impact assessment by the European Environment Agency

Soares, Joana; Gsella, Artur; Horálek, Jan; Guerreiro, Cristina; Ortiz, Alberto González

2020

Fine aerosol chemical composition and sources in Europe using high time resolution instrumentation

Minguillón, M. C.; Prevot, A.S.H.; Riffault, Véronique; Favez, Olivier; Gilardoni, S.; Mocnik, G.; Platt, Stephen Matthew; Green, D; Ovadnevaite, Jurgita; Kasper-Giebl, Anne; Alastuey, A.; Marmureanu, Luminita; Eriksson, A.; Sokolovic, D.; COLOSSAL Team, The

2020

A presentation of the EPISODE urban scale air quality model and its application to Nordic winter conditions

Hamer, Paul David; Walker, Sam-Erik; Sousa Santos, Gabriela; Vogt, Matthias; Vo, Dam Thanh; Lopez-Aparicio, Susana; Ramacher, Martin O. P.; Karl, Matthias

2020

New Nordic emission inventory - Spatial distribution of machinery and residential combustion emission

Paunu, Ville-Veikko; Karvosenoja, N.; Segersson, David; Lopez-Aparicio, Susana; Nielsen, O. K.; Plejdrup, M.; Vo, Dam Thanh; Thorsteinsson, T.; van der Gon, Hugo Denier; Brandt, J.; Geels, C.

2020

Luftkvaliteten i koronaens tid - Hva har vi observert i byene våre?

Høiskar, Britt Ann Kåstad; Grythe, Henrik; Johnsrud, Mona; Eckhardt, Sabine

2020

Hvordan har luftkvalitet i Europa endret seg under lockdown og hvorfor?

Guerreiro, Cristina; Solberg, Sverre; Walker, Sam-Erik; Schneider, Philipp

2020

Patterns in the spectral composition of sunlight and biologically meaningful spectral photon ratios as affected by atmospheric factors

Kotilainen, Titta; Aphalo, Pedro J.; Brelsford, Craig C.; Böok, H.; Devraj, S.; Heikkilä, A.; Hernández, R.; Kylling, Arve; Lindfors, AV; Robson, T. Matthew

Plants rely on spectral cues present in their surroundings, generated by the constantly changing light environment, to guide their growth and reproduction. Photoreceptors mediate the capture of information by plants from the light environment over a wide range of wavelengths, but despite extensive evidence that plants respond to various light cues, only fragmentary data have been published showing patterns of diurnal, seasonal and geographical variation in the spectral composition of daylight. To illustrate patterns in spectral photon ratios, we measured time series of irradiance spectra at two distinct geographical and climatological locations, Helsinki, Finland and Gual Pahari, India. We investigated the drivers behind variation of the spectral photon ratios measured at these two locations, based on the analysis of over 400 000 recorded spectra. Differences in spectral irradiance were explained by different atmospheric factors identified through multiple regression model analysis and comparison to spectral irradiance at ground level simulated with a radiative transfer model. Local seasonal and diurnal changes in spectral photon ratios were related to solar elevation angle, atmospheric water-vapour content and total ozone column thickness and deviated from their long-term averages to an extent likely to affect plant photobiology. We suggest that future studies should investigate possible effects of varying photon ratios on terrestrial plants. Solar elevation angle especially affects the patterns of B:G and B:R ratios. Water vapour has a large effect on the R:FR photon ratio and modelled climate scenarios predict that increasing global temperatures will result in increased atmospheric water vapour. The development of proxy models, utilising available data from weather and climate models, for relevant photon ratios as a function of solar elevation angle and atmospheric factors would facilitate the interpretation of results from past, present and future field studies of plants and vegetation.

Elsevier

2020

Strategies for grouping per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) to protect human and environmental health

Cousins, Ian T.; DeWitt, Jamie C.; Glüge, Juliane; Goldenman, Gretta; Herzke, Dorte; Lohmann, Rainer; Miller, Mark; Ng, Carla A.; Scheringer, Martin; Vierke, Lena; Wang, Zhanyun

Grouping strategies are needed for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), in part, because it would be time and resource intensive to test and evaluate the more than 4700 PFAS on the global market on a chemical-by-chemical basis. In this paper we review various grouping strategies that could be used to inform actions on these chemicals and outline the motivations, advantages and disadvantages for each. Grouping strategies are subdivided into (1) those based on the intrinsic properties of the PFAS (e.g. persistence, bioaccumulation potential, toxicity, mobility, molecular size) and (2) those that inform risk assessment through estimation of cumulative exposure and/or effects. The most precautionary grouping approach of those reviewed within this article suggests phasing out PFAS based on their high persistence alone (the so-called “P-sufficient” approach). The least precautionary grouping approach reviewed advocates only grouping PFAS for risk assessment that have the same toxicological effects, modes and mechanisms of action, and elimination kinetics, which would need to be well documented across different PFAS. It is recognised that, given jurisdictional differences in chemical assessment philosophies and methodologies, no one strategy will be generally acceptable. The guiding question we apply to the reviewed grouping strategies is: grouping for what purpose? The motivation behind the grouping (e.g. determining use in products vs. setting guideline levels for contaminated environments) may lead to different grouping decisions. This assessment provides the necessary context for grouping strategies such that they can be adopted as they are, or built on further, to protect human and environmental health from potential PFAS-related effects.

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

2020

Solar UV radiation measurements in Marambio, Antarctica, during years 2017–2019

Aun, Margit; Lakkala, Kaisa; Sanchez, Ricardo; Asmi, Eija; Nollas, Fernando; Meinander, Outi; Sogacheva, Larisa; De Bock, Veerle; Arola, Antti; de Leeuw, Gerrit; Aaltonen, Veijo; Bolsee, David; Cizkova, Klara; Mangold, Alexander; Metelka, Ladislav; Jakobson, Erko; Svendby, Tove Marit; Gillotay, Didier; Van Opstal, Bert

In March 2017, measurements of downward global irradiance of ultraviolet (UV) radiation were started with a multichannel GUV-2511 radiometer in Marambio, Antarctica (64.23∘ S; 56.62∘ W), by the Finnish Meteorological Institute (FMI) in collaboration with the Servicio Meteorológico Nacional (SMN). These measurements were analysed and the results were compared to previous measurements performed at the same site with the radiometer of the Antarctic NILU-UV network during 2000–2008 and to data from five stations across Antarctica. In 2017/2018 the monthly-average erythemal daily doses from October to January were lower than those averaged over 2000–2008 with differences from 2.3 % to 25.5 %. In 2017/2018 the average daily erythemal dose from September to March was 1.88 kJ m−2, while in 2018/2019 it was 23 % larger (2.37 kJ m−2). Also at several other stations in Antarctica the UV radiation levels in 2017/2018 were below average. The maximum UV indices (UVI) in Marambio were 6.2 and 9.5 in 2017/2018 and 2018/2019, respectively, whereas during years 2000–2008 the maximum was 12. Cloud cover, the strength of the polar vortex and the stratospheric ozone depletion are the primary factors that influence the surface UV radiation levels in Marambio. The lower UV irradiance values in 2017/2018 are explained by the high ozone concentrations in November, February and for a large part of October. The role of cloud cover was clearly seen in December, and to a lesser extent in October and November, when cloud cover qualitatively explains changes which could not be ascribed to changes in total ozone column (TOC). In this study, the roles of aerosols and albedo are of minor influence because the variation of these factors in Marambio was small from one year to the other. The largest variations of UV irradiance occur during spring and early summer when noon solar zenith angle (SZA) is low and the stratospheric ozone concentration is at a minimum (the so-called ozone hole). In 2017/2018, coincident low total ozone column and low cloudiness near solar noon did not occur, and no extreme UV indices were measured.

2020

Analytical techniques in metabolomics

David, Arthur; Rostkowski, Pawel

2020

Impact of snow cover data assimilation over the Tibetan Plateau on medium-range Numerical Weather Prediction

de Rosnay, Patricia; Balsamo, Gianpaolo; Orsolini, Yvan J.; Dutra, Emanuel; Liu, Boqi; Senan, Retish; Wang, Wenli; Wegmann, Martin; Yang, Kun; Zhu, Congwen

2020

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