Intermediate-volatility organic compounds (IVOCs) have
been found
as important sources for secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation.
IVOC emissions from nonroad construction machineries (NRCMs), including
two road rollers and three motor graders, were characterized under
three operation modes using an improved portable emission measurement
system. The fuel-based IVOC emission factors (EFs) of NRCMs varied
from 245.85 to 1802.19 mg/kg·fuel, which were comparable at magnitudes
to the reported results of an ocean-going ship and on-road diesel
vehicles without filters. The discrepancy of IVOC EFs is significant
within different operation modes. IVOC EFs under the idling mode were
1.24–3.28 times higher than those under moving/working modes.
Unspeciated b-alkanes and cyclic compounds, which
were the unresolved components in IVOCs at the molecular level, accounted
for approximately 91% of total IVOCs from NRCMs. The SOA production
potential analysis shows that IVOCs dominated SOA formation of NRCMs.
Our results demonstrate that IVOC emissions from NRCMs are non-negligible.
Thus, an accurate estimation of their IVOC emissions would benefit
the understanding of SOA formation in the urban atmosphere.
Estimating truck emissions accurately would benefit atmospheric research and public health protection. Here, we developed a full-sample enumeration approach TrackATruck to bridge low-frequency but full-size vehicles driving big data to high-resolution emission inventories. Based on 19 billion trajectories, we show how big the emission difference could be using different approaches: 99% variation coefficients on regional total (including 31% emissions from non-local trucks), and ± as large as 15 times on individual counties. Even if total amounts are set the same, the emissions on primary cargo routes were underestimated in the former by a multiple of 2–10 using aggregated approaches. Time allocation proxies are generated, indicating the importance of day-to-day estimation because the variation reached 26-fold. Low emission zone policy reduced emissions in the zone, but raised emissions in upwind areas in Beijing's case. Comprehensive measures should be considered, e.g. the demand-side optimization.
Desirable biosensing assays need to be sensitive, specific, cost‐effective, instrument‐free, and versatile. Herein we report a new strategy termed CLIPON (CRISPR and Large DNA assembly Induced Pregnancy strips for signal‐ON detection) that can deliver these traits. CLIPON integrates a commercial pregnancy test strip (PTS) with four biological elements: the human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), CRISPR‐Cas12a, crRNA and cauliflower‐like large‐sized DNA assemblies (CLD). CLIPON uses the Cas12a/crRNA complex both to recognize a target of interest and to release CLD‐bound hCG so that target presence can translate into a colorimetric signal on the PTS. We demonstrate the versatility of CLIPON through sensitive and specific detection of HPV genomic DNA, SARS‐CoV‐2 genomic RNA and adenosine. We also engineer a cell phone app and a hand‐held microchip to achieve signal quantification. CLIPON represents an attractive option for biosensing and point‐of‐care diagnostics.
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