Abstract
Oil and natural gas are important for energy supply around the world. The
exploring, drilling, transportation and processing in oil and gas regions can
release a lot of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). To understand the VOC
levels, compositions and sources in such regions, an oil and gas station in
northwest China was chosen as the research site and 57 VOCs
designated as the photochemical precursors were continuously measured for an
entire year (September 2014–August 2015) using an online monitoring system.
The average concentration of total VOCs was 297 ± 372 ppbv and the
main contributor was alkanes, accounting for 87.5 % of the total VOCs.
According to the propylene-equivalent concentration and maximum incremental
reactivity methods, alkanes were identified as the most important VOC groups
for the ozone formation potential. Positive matrix factorization (PMF)
analysis showed that the annual average contributions from natural gas, fuel
evaporation, combustion sources, oil refining processes and asphalt
(anthropogenic and natural sources) to the total VOCs were 62.6 ± 3.04, 21.5 ± .99, 10.9 ± 1.57, 3.8 ± 0.50
and 1.3 ± 0.69 %, respectively. The five identified VOC sources
exhibited various diurnal patterns due to their different emission patterns
and the impact of meteorological parameters. Potential source contribution
function (PSCF) and concentration-weighted trajectory (CWT) models based on
backward trajectory analysis indicated that the five identified sources had
similar geographic origins. Raster analysis based on CWT analysis indicated
that the local emissions contributed 48.4–74.6 % to the total VOCs. Based
on the high-resolution observation data, this study clearly described and
analyzed the temporal variation in VOC emission characteristics at a typical
oil and gas field, which exhibited different VOC levels, compositions and
origins compared with those in urban and industrial areas.
Citation
ID:
211496
Ref Key:
zheng2018atmosphericmonitoring