Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Douglas R. Lawson is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Douglas R. Lawson.


Atmospheric Environment | 1994

Temporal and spatial variations of PM2.5 and PM10 aerosol in the Southern California air quality study

Judith C. Chow; John G. Watson; Eric M. Fujita; Zhiqiang Lu; Douglas R. Lawson; Lowell L. Ashbaugh

During the summer and fall of 1987, the Southern California Air Quality Study (SCAQS) was conducted at more than 40 locations to acquire a database with meteorological, air quality, and visibility measurements, and to assess the causes of elevated ozone and suspended particulate matter concentrations throughout metropolitan Los Angeles, CA (the South Coast Air Basin—SoCAB). PM2.5 and PM10 (particles with aerodynamic diameters equal to or less than 2.5 and 10 μm, respectively) mass, elements, water-soluble chloride, nitrate, sulfate, ammonium ions, organic and elemental carbon as well as gaseous ammonia, nitric acid, and sulfur dioxide were measured on eleven episode days during the summer and six episode days during the fall. This paper examines the statistical, temporal, and spatial distributions of the SCAQS aerosol measurements. PM2.5 constituted one-half to two-thirds of PM10 at all sampling sites. PM10 mass concentrations were highest during the fall and were dominated by PM2.5. Nitrate, sulfate, ammonium, and organic and elemental carbon were the most abundant species in the PM2.5 fraction. The coarse particle (PM10 minus PM2.5) fraction was enriched with soil-related elements (e.g. aluminum, silicon, calcium, iron) at the inland sites and with marine-related elements (e.g. sodium, chloride) at the coastal sites. Average concentrations for most chemical compounds were higher during the fall than during the summer, except for sulfate which was more abundant during the summer. PM2.5 nitrate and ammonium concentrations were negatively biased for daytime samples with respect to nighttime samples, consistent with diurnal changes in temperature and the effect of these changes on the equilibrium between particulate ammonium nitrate and gaseous ammonia and nitric acid. Highest sulfur dioxide concentrations were found at the Long Beach site, the location closest to SoCAB oil refineries and ship traffic; and highest ammonia concentrations were found at the Rubidoux site, a location downwind of dairies and agricultural operations.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2004

Emission Rates and Comparative Chemical Composition from Selected In-Use Diesel and Gasoline-Fueled Vehicles

Barbara Zielinska; John C. Sagebiel; Jacob D. McDonald; Kevin A. Whitney; Douglas R. Lawson

Abstract Emission samples for toxicity testing and detailed chemical characterization were collected from a variety of gasoline- and diesel-fueled in-use vehicles operated on the Unified Driving Cycle on a chassis dynamometer. Gasoline vehicles included normal particle mass (particulate matter [PM]) emitters (tested at 72 and 30°F), “black” and “white” smokers, and a new-technology vehicle (tested at 72 °F). Diesel vehicles included current-technology vehicles (tested at 72 and 30°F) and a high PM emitter. Total PM emission rates ranged from below 3 mg/mi up to more than 700 mg/mi for the white smoker gasoline vehicle. Emission rates of organic and elemental carbon (OC/EC), elements (metals and associated analytes), ions, and a variety of particulate and semi-volatile organic compounds (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons [PAH], nitro-PAH, oxy-PAH, hopanes, and steranes) are reported for these vehicles. Speciated organic analysis also was conducted on the fuels and lube oils obtained from these vehicles after the emissions testing. The compositions of emissions were highly dependent on the fuel type (gasoline vs. diesel), the state of vehicle maintenance (low, average, or high emitters; white or black smokers), and ambient conditions (i.e., temperature) of the vehicles. Fuel and oil analyses from these vehicles showed that oil served as a repository for combustion byproducts (e.g., PAH), and oil-burning gasoline vehicles emitted PAH in higher concentrations than did other vehicles. These PAH emissions matched the PAH compositions observed in oil.


Aerosol Science and Technology | 1994

Chemical Mass Balance Source Apportionment of PM10 during the Southern California Air Quality Study

John G. Watson; Judith C. Chow; Zhiqiang Lu; Eric M. Fujita; Douglas H. Lowenthal; Douglas R. Lawson; Lowell L. Ashbaugh

The chemical mass balance (CMB) receptor model was applied to the chemically speciated diurnal particulate matter samples acquired at nine locations in Californias South Coast Air Basin (SoCAB) during the summer and fall of 1987 as part of the Southern California Air Quality Study (SCAQS). Source profiles applicable to the Los Angeles area were used to apportion PM2.5 and PM10 (particles with aerodynamic diameters < 2.5 and 10 μm, respectively) to primary paved road dust, primary construction dust, primary motor vehicle exhaust, primary marine aerosol, secondary ammonium nitrate, and secondary ammonium sulfate. Suspended dust was the major contributor to PM10 during the summer, whereas secondary ammonium nitrate and primary motor vehicle exhaust contributions were high during the fall. Secondary ammonium sulfate contributions were uniform across the SoCAB, with average contributions during the fall less than half those found during the summer. Marine aerosol contributions were lower during the fall than ...


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 1995

Weekday vs. Weekend Ambient Ozone Concentrations: Discussion and Hypotheses with Focus on Northern California

Samuel L. Altshuler; Theodore D. Arcado; Douglas R. Lawson

Abstract Since the early 1970s, researchers and data analysts have reported differences between weekday and weekend ozone concentrations, with higher ozone concentrations occurring on Sundays in some locations. At that time, the phenomenon was referred to as the “Sunday effect.” In the late 1980s, additional papers focused on weekday/weekend differences in air quality in the South Coast (Los Angeles) Air Basin. Analyses of ozone concentrations measured at a number of locations in northern California reveal that average ozone concentrations are frequently higher on weekends than on weekdays. Violations of the California 0.09 ppm 1-hour air quality standard for ozone also occur in disproportionately greater frequency on weekends. We hypothesize that this phenomenon is based largely on the differences between weekday and weekend emission patterns. We believe that the observed differences may provide information regarding which pollutant reduction strategy, NOx or ROG control, may be more effective in reducin...


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2004

Relationship between composition and toxicity of motor vehicle emission samples.

Jacob D. McDonald; Ingvar Eide; JeanClare Seagrave; Barbara Zielinska; Kevin A. Whitney; Douglas R. Lawson; Joe L. Mauderly

In this study we investigated the statistical relationship between particle and semivolatile organic chemical constituents in gasoline and diesel vehicle exhaust samples, and toxicity as measured by inflammation and tissue damage in rat lungs and mutagenicity in bacteria. Exhaust samples were collected from “normal” and “high-emitting” gasoline and diesel light-duty vehicles. We employed a combination of principal component analysis (PCA) and partial least-squares regression (PLS; also known as projection to latent structures) to evaluate the relationships between chemical composition of vehicle exhaust and toxicity. The PLS analysis revealed the chemical constituents covarying most strongly with toxicity and produced models predicting the relative toxicity of the samples with good accuracy. The specific nitro-polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons important for mutagenicity were the same chemicals that have been implicated by decades of bioassay-directed fractionation. These chemicals were not related to lung toxicity, which was associated with organic carbon and select organic compounds that are present in lubricating oil. The results demonstrate the utility of the PCA/PLS approach for evaluating composition–response relationships in complex mixture exposures and also provide a starting point for confirming causality and determining the mechanisms of the lung effects.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2007

Development of Molecular Marker Source Profiles for Emissions from On-Road Gasoline and Diesel Vehicle Fleets

Glynis C. Lough; Charles G. Christensen; James J. Schauer; James Tortorelli; Erin Mani; Douglas R. Lawson; Nigel N. Clark; Peter A. Gabele

As part of the Gasoline/Diesel PM Split Study, relatively large fleets of gasoline vehicles and diesel vehicles were tested on a chassis dynamometer to develop chemical source profiles for source attribution of atmospheric particulate matter in Californias South Coast Air Basin. Gasoline vehicles were tested in cold-start and warm-start conditions, and diesel vehicles were tested through several driving cycles. Tailpipe emissions of particulate matter were analyzed for organic tracer compounds, including hopanes, steranes, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Large intervehicle variation was seen in emission rate and composition, and results were averaged to examine the impacts of vehicle ages, weight classes, and driving cycles on the variation. Average profiles, weighted by mass emission rate, had much lower uncertainty than that associated with intervehicle variation. Mass emission rates and elemental carbon/organic carbon (EC/OC) ratios for gasoline vehicle age classes were influenced most by use of cold-start or warm-start driving cycle (factor of 2-7). Individual smoker vehicles had a large range of mass and EC/OC (factors of 40 and 625, respectively). Gasoline vehicle age averages, data on vehicle ages and miles traveled in the area, and several assumptions about smoker contributions were used to create emissions profiles representative of on-road vehicle fleets in the Los Angeles area in 2001. In the representative gasoline fleet profiles, variation was further reduced, with cold-start or warm-start and the representation of smoker vehicles making a difference of approximately a factor of two in mass emission rate and EC/OC. Diesel vehicle profiles were created on the basis of vehicle age, weight class, and driving cycle. Mass emission rate and EC/OC for diesel averages were influenced by vehicle age (factor of 2-5), weight class (factor of 2-7), and driving cycle (factor of 10-20). Absolute and relative emissions of molecular marker compounds showed levels of variation similar to those of mass and EC/OC.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2007

Variations in Speciated Emissions from Spark-Ignition and Compression-Ignition Motor Vehicles in California's South Coast Air Basin

Eric M. Fujita; Barbara Zielinska; David E. Campbell; W. Patrick Arnott; John C. Sagebiel; Lynn Mazzoleni; Judith C. Chow; Peter A. Gabele; William Crews; Richard Snow; Nigel N. Clark; Scott Wayne; Douglas R. Lawson

Abstract The U.S. Department of Energy Gasoline/Diesel PM Split Study examined the sources of uncertainties in using an organic compound-based chemical mass balance receptor model to quantify the contributions of spark-ignition (SI) and compression-ignition (CI) engine exhaust to ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5). This paper presents the chemical composition profiles of SI and CI engine exhaust from the vehicle-testing portion of the study. Chemical analysis of source samples consisted of gravimetric mass, elements, ions, organic carbon (OC), and elemental carbon (EC) by the Interagency Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments (IMPROVE) and Speciation Trends Network (STN) thermal/optical methods, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), hopanes, steranes, alkanes, and polar organic compounds. More than half of the mass of carbonaceous particles emitted by heavy-duty diesel trucks was EC (IMPROVE) and emissions from SI vehicles contained predominantly OC. Although total carbon (TC) by the IMPROVE and STN protocols agreed well for all of the samples, the STN/IMPROVE ratios for EC from SI exhaust decreased with decreasing sample loading. SI vehicles, whether low or high emitters, emitted greater amounts of high-molecular-weight particulate PAHs (benzo[ghi]perylene, indeno[1,2,3-cd]pyrene, and coronene) than did CI vehicles. Diesel emissions contained higher abundances of two- to four-ring semivolatile PAHs. Diacids were emitted by CI vehicles but are also prevalent in secondary organic aerosols, so they cannot be considered unique tracers. Hopanes and steranes were present in lubricating oil with similar composition for both gasoline and diesel vehicles and were negligible in gasoline or diesel fuels. CI vehicles emitted greater total amounts of hopanes and steranes on a mass per mile basis, but abundances were comparable to SI exhaust normalized to TC emissions within measurement uncertainty. The combustion-produced high-molecular-weight PAHs were found in used gasoline motor oil but not in fresh oil and are negligible in used diesel engine oil. The contributions of lubrication oils to abundances of these PAHs in the exhaust were large in some cases and were variable with the age and consumption rate of the oil. These factors contributed to the observed variations in their abundances to total carbon or PM2.5 among the SI composition profiles.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2003

Evolution of the Magnitude and Spatial Extent of the Weekend Ozone Effect in California’s South Coast Air Basin, 1981–2000

Eric M. Fujita; William R. Stockwell; David E. Campbell; Robert E. Keislar; Douglas R. Lawson

Abstract Since the mid-1970s, ozone (O3) levels in portions of California’s South Coast Air Basin (SoCAB) on weekends have been as high as or higher than levels on weekdays, even though emissions of O3 precursors are lower on weekends. Analysis of the ambient data indicates that the intensity and spatial extent of the weekend O3 effect are correlated with day-of-week variations in the extent of O3 inhibition caused by titration with nitric oxide (NO), reaction of hydroxyl radical (OH) with nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and rates of O3 accumulation. Lower NO mixing ratios and higher NO2/oxides of nitrogen (NOx) ratios on weekend mornings allow O3 to begin accumulating approximately an hour earlier on weekends. The weekday/weekend differences in the duration of O3 accumulation remained relatively constant from 1981 to 2000. In contrast, the rate of O3 accumulation decreased by one-third to one-half over the same period; the largest reductions occurred in the central basin on weekdays. Trends in mixing ratios of O3 precursors show a transition to lower volatile organic compound (VOC)/NOx ratios caused by greater reductions in VOC emissions. Reductions in VOC/NOx ratios were greater on weekdays, resulting in higher VOC/NOx ratios on weekends relative to weekdays. Trends in VOC/NOx ratios parallel the downward trend in peak O3 levels, a shift in the location of peak O3 from the central to the eastern portion of the basin, and an increase in the magnitude and spatial extent of the weekend O3 effect.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2003

Weekday versus weekend activity patterns for ozone precursor emissions in California's South Coast Air Basin.

Lyle R. Chinkin; Dana L. Coe; Tami H. Funk; Hilary R. Hafner; Paul T. Roberts; Patrick A. Ryan; Douglas R. Lawson

Abstract Ambient O3 concentrations in California’s South Coast Air Basin (SoCAB) can be as much as 55% higher on weekends than on weekdays under comparable meteorological conditions. This is paradoxical because emissions of O3 precursors (hydrocarbons, CO, and nitrogen oxides [NOx]) are lower on weekends. Day-of-week emissions activity data were collected and analyzed to investigate the hypothesized causes of the “weekend O3 effect.” Emission activity data were collected for various mobile, area, and point sources throughout the SoCAB, including on-road vehicles, lawn and garden equipment, barbecues, fireplaces, solvent use, and point sources with continuous emission monitoring data. The results of this study indicate significant differences between weekday and weekend emission activity patterns and emissions. Their combined effect results in a 12–18% decrease in reactive organic gases (ROGs) and a 35–41% decrease in NOx emissions on Saturdays and Sundays, respectively, relative to weekdays in summer 2000. These changes in emissions result in an increase of more than 30% in the ROG/NOx ratio on weekends compared with weekdays, which, along with lower NOx emissions, leads to increased O3 production on weekends.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2003

Diurnal and weekday variations in the source contributions of ozone precursors in California's South Coast Air Basin.

Eric M. Fujita; David E. Campbell; Barbara Zielinska; John C. Sagebiel; John L. Bowen; Wendy S. Goliff; William R. Stockwell; Douglas R. Lawson

Abstract For at least 30 years, ozone (O3) levels on weekends in parts of California’s South Coast (Los Angeles) Air Basin (SoCAB) have been as high as or higher than on weekdays, even though ambient levels of O3 precursors are lower on weekends than on weekdays. A field study was conducted in the Los Angeles area during fall 2000 to test whether proposed relationships between emission sources and ambient nonmethane hydrocarbon (NMHC) and oxides of nitrogen (NOx) levels can account for observed diurnal and day-of-week variations in the concentration and proportions of precursor pollutants that may affect the efficiency and rate of O3 formation. The contributions to ambient NMHC by motor vehicle exhaust and evaporative emissions, estimated using chemical mass balance (CMB) receptor modeling, ranged from 65 to 85% with minimal day-of-week variation. Ratios of ambient NOx associated with black carbon (BC) to NOx associated with carbon monoxide (CO) were approximately 1.25 ± 0.22 during weekdays and 0.76 ± 0.07 and 0.52 ± 0.07 on Saturday and Sunday, respectively. These results demonstrate that lower NOx emissions from diesel exhaust can be a major factor causing lower NOx mixing ratios and higher NMHC/NOx ratios on weekends. Nonmobile sources showed no significant day-of-week variations in their contributions to NMHC. Greater amounts of gasoline emissions are carried over on Friday and Saturday evenings but are, at most, a minor factor contributing to higher NMHC/NOx ratios on weekend mornings.

Collaboration


Dive into the Douglas R. Lawson's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eric M. Fujita

Desert Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Judith C. Chow

Desert Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John G. Watson

Desert Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kenneth T. Knapp

United States Environmental Protection Agency

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge