DiMIZA : a dispersion modeling based impact zone assessment of mercury (Hg) emissions from coal-fired power plants and risk evaluation for inhalation exposure
Karaca, Ferhat and Kumisbek, Aiganym and Inglezakis, Vassilis J. and Azat, Seitkhan and Zhakiyenova, Almagul and Ormanova, Gulden and Guney, Mert (2021) DiMIZA : a dispersion modeling based impact zone assessment of mercury (Hg) emissions from coal-fired power plants and risk evaluation for inhalation exposure. Engineering Reports, 3 (7). e12357. ISSN 2577-8196 (https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12357)
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Abstract
Coal-fired combined heat and power plants (CHPPs) serving large districts are among the major sources of mercury (Hg) emissions globally, including Central Asia. Most CHPPs reside on the outskirts of urban areas, thus creating risk zones. The impact of atmospheric Hg levels on health is complex to establish due to the site-specific nature of the relationship between CHPP emissions and hotspots (i.e., localized areas where Hg concentrations greatly exceed its background value). However, a methodological identification of "emission impact zones" for atmospheric Hg emissions from CHPPs with potential adverse public health outcomes has not yet been fully studied. The present work suggests an easy-to-use and cost-free impact zone identification method based on HYSPLIT dispersion modeling for atmospheric Hg emissions from CHPPs. The dispersion modeling based impact zone assessment, DiMIZA, merges short-term dispersion runs (e.g., hourly) into long-term emission impacts (e.g., yearly), which allows to identify the source impact zones. To perform a case study using the suggested method, a CHPP plant in Nur-Sultan (capital of Kazakhstan) was selected. First, traditional ad-hoc measurements were performed to identify the level of dispersions at ground level in different atmospheric stability characteristics. Then, HYSPLIT dispersion model was run for the same days and times of those particular periods when the field measurements were performed. The model results were evaluated via a comparison with the ground measurements and assessed for their atmospheric stability and diel conditions. Due to different emission loads in heating and non-heating periods, two separate pairs of impact zone maps were generated, and public Hg exposure health risks (acute and chronic) were assessed.
ORCID iDs
Karaca, Ferhat, Kumisbek, Aiganym, Inglezakis, Vassilis J. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0195-0417, Azat, Seitkhan, Zhakiyenova, Almagul, Ormanova, Gulden and Guney, Mert;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 77753 Dates: DateEvent31 July 2021Published29 December 2020Published Online9 December 2020AcceptedSubjects: Technology > Chemical engineering Department: Faculty of Engineering > Chemical and Process Engineering Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 09 Sep 2021 13:58 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 13:11 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/77753