Articles | Volume 17, issue 8
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-5379-2017
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-5379-2017
Research article
 | 
26 Apr 2017
Research article |  | 26 Apr 2017

Long-term particulate matter modeling for health effect studies in California – Part 2: Concentrations and sources of ultrafine organic aerosols

Jianlin Hu, Shantanu Jathar, Hongliang Zhang, Qi Ying, Shu-Hua Chen, Christopher D. Cappa, and Michael J. Kleeman

Download

Interactive discussion

Status: closed
Status: closed
AC: Author comment | RC: Referee comment | SC: Short comment | EC: Editor comment
Printer-friendly Version - Printer-friendly version Supplement - Supplement

Peer-review completion

AR: Author's response | RR: Referee report | ED: Editor decision
AR by J. Hu on behalf of the Authors (15 Mar 2017)  Author's response    Manuscript
ED: Publish as is (22 Mar 2017) by Qiang Zhang
Short summary
Organic aerosol is a major constituent of ultrafine particulate matter (PM0.1). In this study, a source-oriented air quality model was used to simulate the concentrations and sources of primary and secondary organic aerosols in PM0.1 in California for a 9-year modeling period to provide useful information for epidemiological studies to further investigate the associations with health outcomes.
Altmetrics
Final-revised paper
Preprint