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Assessment of Source Profile of Nonmethane Hydrocarbon in the Ambient Air of Metro City Delhi, India

Ram Pravesh Kumar1 * , Alok Kumar Pandey1 , Ritesh Kumar2 , Prabhat Kashyap1 and Krishan Kumar1

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.12944/CWE.12.2.16

In this paper presents the assessment of source profile of nonmethane hydrocarbons (NMHCs) in the ambient air of Delhi. The samples were collected from five different urban sites using tedlar bags for aliphatic NMHCs and activated adsorption charcoal tubes for aromatic NMHCs during  October 2014 to September 2015. Eleven aliphatic NMHCs  propane, n-butane i-butene, i-butane, 1,3-butadiene, trans-2-butene, cis-2-pentene, n-pentane, n-hexane, heptane and four aromatic NMHCs benzene, toluene, o-xylene, p/m-xylene were identified in 112 urban ambient air samples. Samples were analysed using gas chromatography which is coupled with flame ionization detector (GC-FID). Pearson correlation coefficient (r) found to be = 0.5±0.2, shows significance level to have moderate among the NMHCs, indicates NMHCs in the urban ambient air have many sources profile mentioned in PCA result. Factor analysis(FA) and receptor model, i.e., Principal Component Analysis(PCA)/Absolute Principal Component Score (APCS) was used for identification of source profile distribution. PCA analysis after the varimax rotation  have identified six possible source profile and explained about 70 % of the total dataset. The average % contribution of NMHCs emitted from vehicles was found to be 23%, whereas polymer manufacturing industries contributes 19% and  from refinery operation/ gas station  contribute 14%, and 13%, emitted from flare emissions and 10% from natural gas emissions. The secondary industrial process, including paints, body soaps and metal fabricator and processing  was contributing 8%. Out of these  remaining 13% was estimated as unidentified sources. These findings may be used by government authorities to formulate  policies and strategies for improvement of urban  air quality that can improve the health of urban communities.


GC-FID; NMHC; Source apportionment; PCA; Urban air pollution

Copy the following to cite this article:

Kumar R. P, Pandey A. K, Kumar R, Kashyap P, Kumar K. Assessment of Source Profile of Nonmethane Hydrocarbon in the Ambient Air of Metro City Delhi, India. Curr World Environ 2017;12(2). DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.12944/CWE.12.2.16

Copy the following to cite this URL:

Kumar R. P, Pandey A. K, Kumar R, Kashyap P, Kumar K. Assessment of Source Profile of Nonmethane Hydrocarbon in the Ambient Air of Metro City Delhi, India. Curr World Environ 2017;12(2). Available from: http://www.cwejournal.org/?p=17168