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HERO ID
3860957
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Influence of rainfall duration and intensity on particulate matter removal from plant leaves
Author(s)
Xu, X; Zhang, Z; Bao, L; Mo, L; Yu, X; Fan, D; Lun, X
Year
2017
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Science of the Total Environment
ISSN:
0048-9697
EISSN:
1879-1026
Volume
609
Page Numbers
11-16
Language
English
PMID
28732292
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.07.141
Web of Science Id
WOS:000410352900003
Abstract
Rainfall influences removal of airborne particulate matter (PM) from leaf surfaces through a process called wash off resulting in throughfall that carries PM to the ground. The present study examined the effects of rainfall characteristics on PM wash-off mass and rate from the foliage of four broadleaf species, to investigate retention of PM pollution. In a controlled rainfall simulation experiment, rainfall intensity was set to 15, 30, and 50mmh(-1), and sampling intervals for the three rainfall intensities were divided into 10, 5, and 3min, respectively. Of the plants examined, the evergreen shrub Euonymus japonicus had the greatest surface PM accumulation before rainfall (165μgcm(-2)), maximum wash-off during the first 2.5mm of rain (30μgcm(-2)), and maximum surface PM retention after rainfall (24μgcm(-2)). Fitting observations with the Box Lucas regression model, cumulative PM wash-off rates increased with cumulative rainfall amount, until the curves tended to become steady after rain exceeded 12.5mm. Wash off removed 51 to 70% of surface PM accumulation. As rainfall intensity increased, the duration of PM wash-off decreased, and wash-off rates were highest during the first rainfall interval. However, there was no significant difference between PM wash-off rates for rainfall intensities of 30 and 50mmh(-1) in each rainfall interval. In addition, rain did not remove all PM completely, and PM retention following rainfall differed with rainfall intensity, except for Populus tomentosa.
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