Sarah G. Riddle
University of California, Davis
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Aerosol Science and Technology | 2004
Thomas A. Cahill; Steven S. Cliff; Kevin D. Perry; Michael P. Jimenez-Cruz; Graham Bench; Patrick G. Grant; Dawn Ueda; James F. Shackelford; Michael R. Dunlap; Michael L. Meier; Peter B. Kelly; Sarah G. Riddle; Jodye Selco; Robert Z. Leifer
The collapse of the World Trade Center (WTC) buildings #2 (South Tower), #1 (North Tower), and #7 created an enormous collapse pile which emitted intense plumes of acrid smoke and dust until roughly mid-December, when the last spontaneous surface fire occurred. We collected particles by size (8 modes, ≈12 to 0.09 micrometers diameter) and time (typical resolution of 1 to 3 h) from October 2 until late December at the EML 201 Varick Street site roughly 1.8 km NNE of the collapse site and 50 m above ground level. Here we show some of the 70,000 mass and elemental data from the time period October 2 through October 30. Identification of a WTC collapse pile source for aerosols seen at the receptor site were based upon the simultaneous presence of finely powdered concrete, gypsum, and glass with intense very fine combustion mode mass episodes concurrent with winds from the southwest quadrant. The results, derived from seven independent beam-based analytical techniques, showed that while PM10 and PM2.5 24 h values rarely, if ever, violated federal air quality standards, WTC-derived plumes swept over lower Manhattan Island, resulting in intense aerosol impacts of duration a few hours at any one site. The WTC plume resembled in many ways those seen from municipal waste incinerators and high temperatures processes in coal-fired power plants. The size fractions above 1 micrometer contained finely powdered concrete, gypsum, and glass, with sootlike coatings and anthropogenic metals, but little asbestos. Composition in the very fine size range (0.26 > Dp > 0.09 μm) was dominated by sulfuric acid and organic matter, including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and their derivatives, and glasslike silicon-containing aerosols. Many metals were seen in this mode, most, but not all, at low concentrations. The concentrations of very fine silicon, sulfur, and many metals, as well as coarse anthropogenic metals, decreased markedly during October, probably in association with the cooling of the collapse piles. Values of very fine elements seen in May, 2002 at the WTC site were only a few percent of October values.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2007
Chris A. Jakober; Sarah G. Riddle; Michael A. Robert; Hugo Destaillats; M J Charles; Peter G. Green; Michael J. Kleeman
Environmental Science & Technology | 2008
Michael J. Kleeman; Sarah G. Riddle; Michael A. Robert; Chris A. Jakober
Atmospheric Environment | 2008
Michael J. Kleeman; Michael A. Robert; Sarah G. Riddle; Philip M. Fine; Michael D. Hays; James J. Schauer; Michael P. Hannigan
Atmospheric Environment | 2007
Sarah G. Riddle; Chris A. Jakober; Michael A. Robert; Thomas M. Cahill; M. Judith Charles; Michael J. Kleeman
Environmental Science & Technology | 2007
Sarah G. Riddle; Michael A. Robert; Chris A. Jakober; Michael P. Hannigan; Michael J. Kleeman
Environmental Science & Technology | 2009
Michael J. Kleeman; Sarah G. Riddle; Michael A. Robert; Chris A. Jakober; Phillip M. Fine; Michael D. Hays; James J. Schauer; Michael P. Hannigan
Environmental Science & Technology | 2008
Chris A. Jakober; Michael A. Robert; Sarah G. Riddle; Hugo Destaillats; M. Judith Charles; Peter G. Green; Michael J. Kleeman
Environmental Science & Technology | 2008
Sarah G. Riddle; Michael A. Robert; Chris A. Jakober; Michael P. Hannigan; Michael J. Kleeman
Environmental Science & Technology | 2008
Michael J. Kleeman; Sarah G. Riddle; Chris A. Jakober