Effect of Roadbed Configuration on Traffic Derived Aerosols

Abstract
Aerosols present upwind and downwind of freeways in the Los Angeles Basin were collected in five particle size ranges by Lundgren impactors with after filters and analyzed for elemental content by ion-excited x-ray emission. The contribution of freeway traffic to total airborne particulate load was obtained by subtracting the local background, measured by an upwind sampler, from the values obtained by downwind samplers on a size by size, element by element basis. This contribution correlated reasonably well with estimates derived from automotive and roadbed expendable rates. Traffic-derived aerosols, normalized to vehicular flow, were considerably lower in mass downwind of depressed roadbed configurations than either at grade or raised configurations. A line source model, combined with literature values for emitted lead, produced good agreement with results obtained in the at grade configuration.