2009
DOI: 10.1021/es802413j
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Comprehensive Simultaneous Shipboard and Airborne Characterization of Exhaust from a Modern Container Ship at Sea

Abstract: We report the first joint shipboard and airborne study focused on the chemical composition and water-uptake behavior of particulate ship emissions. The study focuses on emissions from the main propulsion engine of a Post-Panamax class container ship cruising off the central coast of California and burning heavy fuel oil. Shipboard sampling included microorifice uniform deposit impactors (MOUDI) with subsequent offline analysis, whereas airborne measurements involved a number of real-time analyzers to character… Show more

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Cited by 198 publications
(218 citation statements)
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“…While local vehicular traffic was the largest source of ambient PM 2.5 mass in Cork Harbour during the sampling period, shipping traffic contributed significantly to ambient particle number concentrations (18%). Considering that fresh ship exhaust particles reside predominantly in the ultrafine mode and contain polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and transition metals with known toxicological effects, this source may have implications for human health in the area (Lippmann et al, 2006;Peltier et al, 2008;Murphy et al, 2009;Healy et al, 2009;Sodeau et al, 2009). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While local vehicular traffic was the largest source of ambient PM 2.5 mass in Cork Harbour during the sampling period, shipping traffic contributed significantly to ambient particle number concentrations (18%). Considering that fresh ship exhaust particles reside predominantly in the ultrafine mode and contain polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and transition metals with known toxicological effects, this source may have implications for human health in the area (Lippmann et al, 2006;Peltier et al, 2008;Murphy et al, 2009;Healy et al, 2009;Sodeau et al, 2009). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…load factors (Agrawal et al, 2008(Agrawal et al, , 2010Lack et al, 2008Lack et al, , 2009Moldanova et al, 2009;Murphy et al, 2009;Petzold et al, 2008Petzold et al, , 2010. Further studies have reviewed and compared emission factors (Buhaug et al, 2009;Dalsøren et al, 2009;Lack and Corbett, 2012).…”
Section: International Shipping and Aviationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To account for hygroscopicity and dry size differences between aerosol, both droplet sizes are selected from the point where activation is first observed. TDGA has been applied to several ambient aerosol samples (AsaAwuku et al, 2011;Bougiatioti et al, 2009Bougiatioti et al, , 2011Lance et al, 2009;Murphy et al, 2009;Padró et al, 2010Padró et al, , 2011Cerully et al, 2011), secondary organic aerosol (SOA) (Engelhart et al, 2008(Engelhart et al, , 2011Asa-Awuku et al, 2009 and laboratory-generated aerosol (Moore et al, 2008;Kumar et al, 2011a,b). In general, slower kinetics than calibration aerosol have been related to insoluble organics from SOA chamber experiments (Asa-Awuku et al, 2009), fresh exhaust plumes , and mineral dust particles when using a dry generation technique (Kumar et al, 2011a,b).…”
Section: T Raatikainen Et Al: Activation Kinetics From Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If critical supersaturation s c s after the instrument supersaturation develops (typical of large hygroscopic particles), one can assume that s − s eq ≈ s (Nenes et al, 2001). Then from applying the chain rule to Eq.…”
Section: Appendix a Droplet Growth Scaling Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
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