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Fant 2611 publikasjoner. Viser side 39 av 262:

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Modified Target Diagram to check compliance of low-cost sensors with the Data Quality Objectives of the European air quality directive

Yatkin, Sinan; Gerboles, Michel; Borowiak, Annette; Davila, Silvije; Spinelle, Laurent; Bartonova, Alena; Dauge, Franck Rene; Schneider, Philipp; Van Poppel, Martine; Peters, Jan; Matheeussen, Christina; Signorini, Marco

The modified Target Diagram (MTD) was developed to evaluate the performance of low-cost sensors (LCS) for air quality monitoring in comparison with reference methods by reporting relative expanded uncertainty and its contributors. An MTD provides several pieces of information, including compliance with regulation, sources of error and how to diminish them, completeness and validity of LCS calibration etc. It allows the user to examine the effect of selecting different regression types and residual fitting on the LCS measurement uncertainty. The ordinary least squared regression with fitted residuals and dynamic between reference analyser uncertainty rather than constant ones yielded more realistic LCS measurement uncertainty compared to other options. The MTD is a fast visual tool to extract several pieces of information on evaluation of any candidate method against reference method.

Elsevier

2022

Six-week inhalation of lead oxide nanoparticles in mice affects antioxidant defense, immune response, kidneys, intestine and bones

Tulinska, Jana; Krivosikova, Zora; Liskova, Aurelia; Mikusova, Miroslava Lehotska; Masanova, Vlasta; Rollerova, Eva; Stefikova, Kornelia; Wsolova, Ladislava; Bábelová, Andrea; Tothova, Lubomira; Busova, Milena; Babickova, Janka; Uhnakova, Iveta; Alacova, Radka; Dusinska, Maria; Horvathova, Mira; Szabova, Michaela; Vecera, Zbynek; Mikuska, Pavel; Coufalik, Pavel; Krumal, Kamil; Alexa, Lukas; Piler, Pavel; Thon, Vojtech; Docekal, Bohumil

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

2022

Machine learning-based stocks and flows modeling of road infrastructure

Ebrahimi, Babak; Rosado, Leonardo; Wallbaum, Holger

This paper introduces a new method to account for the stocks and flows of road infrastructure at the national level based on material flow accounting (MFA). The proposed method closes some of the current shortcomings in road infrastructures that were identified through MFA: (1) the insufficient implementation of prospective analysis, (2) heavy use of archetypes as a way to represent road infrastructure, (3) inadequate attention to the inclusion of dissipative flows, and (4) limited coverage of the uncertainties. The proposed dynamic bottom-up MFA method was tested on the Norwegian road network to estimate and predict the material stocks and flows between 1980 and 2050. Here, a supervised machine learning model was introduced to estimate the road infrastructure instead of archetypical mapping of different roads. The dissipation of materials from the road infrastructure based on tire–pavement interaction was incorporated. Moreover, this study utilizes iterative classified and regression trees, lifetime distributions, randomized material intensities, and sensitivity analyses to quantify the uncertainties.

John Wiley & Sons

2022

Increasing Trends of Legacy and Emerging Organic Contaminants in a Dated Sediment Core From East-Africa

Nipen, Maja; Vogt, Rolf David; Bohlin-Nizzetto, Pernilla; Borgå, Katrine; Mwakalapa, Eliezer Brown; Borgen, Anders Røsrud; Schlabach, Martin; Christensen, Guttorm; Mmochi, Aviti John; Breivik, Knut

Temporal trends of industrial organic contaminants can show how environmental burdens respond to changes in production, regulation, and other anthropogenic and environmental factors. Numerous studies have documented such trends from the Northern Hemisphere, while there is very limited data in the literature from sub-Saharan Africa. We hypothesized that the temporal trends of legacy and contemporary industrial contaminants in sub-Saharan Africa could greatly differ from the regions in which many of these chemicals were initially produced and more extensively used. For this purpose, a dated sediment core covering six decades from a floodplain system in urban Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, was analysed. The samples were analysed for selected legacy persistent organic pollutants (POPs) [polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polybrominated biphenyl ethers (PBDEs)] and chemicals of emerging concern (CECs) [alternative brominated flame retardants (aBFRs), chlorinated paraffins (CPs), and dechloranes]. All groups of chemicals showed a steep increase in concentrations towards the uppermost sediment layers reflecting the more recent years. Concentrations of the individual compound groups in surface sediment were found in the order CPs >> aBFRs ∼ ∑25PBDEs > dechloranes ∼ ∑32PCBs. Time trends for the individual compounds and compound groups differed, with ∑32PCBs showing presence in sediments since at least the early 1960s, while some CECs first occurred in sediments corresponding to the last decade. Investigations into potential drivers for the observed trends showed that socioeconomic factors related to growth in population, economy, and waste generation have contributed to increasing concentrations of PBDEs, aBFRs, CPs, and Dechlorane Plus. Further monitoring of temporal trends of industrial organic contaminants in urban areas in the Global South is recommended.

Frontiers Media S.A.

2022

Mapping global flying aircraft activities using Landsat 8 and cloud computing

Zhao, Fen; Xia, Lang; Kylling, Arve; Shang, Hua; Yang, Peng

Elsevier

2022

Source term determination with elastic plume bias correction

Tichý, Ondřej; Šmídl, Václav; Evangeliou, Nikolaos

2022

Longitudinal changes in concentrations of persistent organic pollutants (1986–2016) and their associations with type 2 diabetes mellitus

Charles, Dolley; Berg, Vivian; Nøst, Therese Haugdahl; Bergdahl, Ingvar A.; Huber, Sandra; Ayotte, Pierre; Wilsgaard, Tom; Averina, Maria; Sandanger, Torkjel M; Rylander, Charlotta

Elsevier

2022

Microfiber emissions from wastewater effluents: abundance, transport behavior and exposure risk for biota in an arctic fjord

Herzke, Dorte; Ghaffari, Peygham; Sundet, Jan Henry; Tranang, Caroline Aas; Halsband, Claudia

Microfibers (MF) are one of the major classes of microplastic found in the marine environment on a global scale. Very little is known about how they move and distribute from point sources such as wastewater effluents into the ocean. We chose Adventfjorden near the settlement of Longyearbyen on the Arctic Svalbard archipelago as a case study to investigate how microfibers emitted with untreated wastewater will distribute in the fjord, both on a spatial and temporal scale. Fiber abundance in the effluent was estimated from wastewater samples taken during two one-week periods in June and September 2017. Large emissions of MFs were detected, similar in scale to a modern WWTP serving 1.3 million people and providing evidence of the importance of untreated wastewater from small settlements as major local sources for MF emissions in the Arctic. Fiber movement and distribution in the fjord mapped using an online-coupled hydrodynamic-drift model (FVCOM-FABM). For parameterizing a wider spectrum of fibers from synthetic to wool, four different density classes of MFs, i.e., buoyant, neutral, sinking, and fast sinking fibers are introduced to the modeling framework. The results clearly show that fiber class has a large impact on the fiber distributions. Light fibers remained in the surface layers and left the fjord quickly with outgoing currents, while heavy fibers mostly sank to the bottom and deposited in the inner parts of the fjord and along the northern shore. A number of accumulation sites were identified within the fjord. The southern shore, in contrast, was much less affected, with low fiber concentrations throughout the modeling period. Fiber distributions were then compared with published pelagic and benthic fauna distributions in different seasons at selected stations around the fjord. The ratios of fibers to organisms showed a very wide range, indicating hot spots of encounter risk for pelagic and benthic biota. This approach, in combination with in-situ ground-truthing, can be instrumental in understanding microplastic pathways and fate in fjord systems and coastal areas and help authorities develop monitoring and mitigation strategies for microfiber and microplastic pollution in their local waters.

Frontiers Media S.A.

2021

Risk assessment of caffeine exposure from diet and personal care products. Opinion of the Panel on Food Additives, Flavourings, Processing Aids, Materials in Contact with Food, and Cosmetics of the Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food and Environment

Carlsen, Monica Hauger; Devold, Tove Gulbrandsen; Granum, Berit Brunstad; Lillegaard, Inger Therese Laugsand; Mathisen, Gro Haarklou; Rasinger, Josef; Rohloff, Jens; Starrfelt, Jostein; Svendsen, Camilla; Bruzell, Ellen Merete; Husøy, Trine; Rundén-Pran, Elise

2021

Effects of extreme meteorological conditions in 2018 on European methane emissions estimated using atmospheric inversions

Thompson, Rona Louise; Zwaaftink, Christine Groot; Brunner, D; Tsuruta, Aki; Aalto, T; Raivonen, M; Crippa, M.; Solazzo, Efisio; Guizzardi, D.; Regnier, P.; Maisonnier, M.

The effect of the 2018 extreme meteorological conditions in Europe on methane (CH4) emissions is examined using estimates from four atmospheric inversions calculated for the period 2005–2018. For most of Europe, we find no anomaly in 2018 compared to the 2005–2018 mean. However, we find a positive anomaly for the Netherlands in April, which coincided with positive temperature and soil moisture anomalies suggesting an increase in biogenic sources. We also find a negative anomaly for the Netherlands for September–October, which coincided with a negative anomaly in soil moisture, suggesting a decrease in soil sources. In addition, we find a positive anomaly for Serbia in spring, summer and autumn, which coincided with increases in temperature and soil moisture, again suggestive of changes in biogenic sources, and the annual emission for 2018 was 33 ± 38% higher than the 2005–2017 mean. These results indicate that CH4 emissions from areas where the natural source is thought to be relatively small can still vary due to meteorological conditions. At the European scale though, the degree of variability over 2005–2018 was small, and there was negligible impact on the annual CH4 emissions in 2018 despite the extreme meteorological conditions.

This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Rising methane: is warming feeding warming? (part 2)’.

2021

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