ABSTRACT The objective of this study is to develop and evaluate an interpretable, robust station–season index that characterizes fine–coarse particulate‐matter mixture regimes using routinely available regulatory monitoring data. Using EPA AQS daily and observations (2022–2024), we computed the daily fine fraction and coarse mass . Each station–season–year was summarized by robust statistics: the median fine fraction , median , and a coarse‐tail burstiness metric . We then defined a nonlinear robust screening index, with fixed parameters , , and , designed to increase with typical fine‐dominant exposure and decrease with stronger coarse‐tail influence. Analyses used stations with consistent multi‐year coverage, stratified by location setting (suburban; urban and center city) and land use (residential; commercial), with group differences summarized by median contrasts and nonparametric bootstrap confidence intervals. Seasonality dominates: is lowest in spring (March–May) and highest in summer (June–August) across settings. Land‐use contrasts are generally modest, although in DJF within urban and center city, residential stations show higher than commercial stations. Overall, provides an interpretable, robustness‐oriented tool for comparing fine–coarse mixture regimes using widely available monitoring data, rather than for source attribution or health‐outcome inference.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Sierra‐Porta et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7fcdbfa21ec5bbf086be — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/clen.70191
D. Sierra‐Porta
Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar
Isabella S. Arrieta-Guardo
Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar
José F. González-Ortiz
Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar
CLEAN - Soil Air Water
Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...