Karl M.
Seltzer
*a,
Venkatesh
Rao
a,
Havala O. T.
Pye
b,
Benjamin N.
Murphy
b,
Bryan K.
Place
c,
Peeyush
Khare
de,
Drew R.
Gentner
d,
Christine
Allen
f,
David
Cooley
g,
Rich
Mason
a and
Marc
Houyoux
a
aOffice of Air and Radiation, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 109 TW Alexander Dr, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, USA. E-mail: seltzer.karl@epa.gov
bOffice of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 109 TW Alexander Dr, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, USA
cOak Ridge Institute for Science and Engineering (ORISE) Postdoctoral Program at the Office of Research and Development, US Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, USA
dDepartment of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511, USA
ePaul Scherrer Institute, 5232 Villigen, Aargau, Switzerland
fGeneral Dynamics Information Technology, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, USA
gAbt Associates, 5001 South Miami Boulevard, Suite 210, Durham, NC 27703, USA
First published on 19th July 2023
Liquid asphalt is a petroleum-derived substance commonly used in construction activities. Recent work has identified lower volatility, reactive organic carbon from asphalt as an overlooked source of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) precursor emissions. Here, we leverage potential emission estimates and usage data to construct a bottom-up inventory of asphalt-related emissions in the United States. In 2018, we estimate that hot-mix, warm-mix, emulsified, cutback, and roofing asphalt generated ∼380 Gg (317 Gg–447 Gg) of organic compound emissions. The impacts of these emissions on anthropogenic SOA and ozone throughout the contiguous United States are estimated using photochemical modeling. In several major cities, asphalt-related emissions can increase modeled summertime SOA, on average, by 0.1–0.2 μg m−3 (2–4% of SOA) and may reach up to 0.5 μg m−3 at noontime on select days. The influence of asphalt-related emissions on modeled ozone are generally small (∼0.1 ppb). We estimate that asphalt paving-related emissions are half of what they were nearly 50 years ago, largely due to the concerted efforts to reduce emissions from cutback asphalts. If on-road mobile emissions continue their multidecadal decline, contributions of urban SOA from evaporative and non-road mobile sources will continue to grow in relative importance.
Environmental significanceLiquid asphalt is a petroleum-derived material commonly used as a binder or sealant in construction. Historically, emissions from asphalt paving processes occurring near-ambient temperatures have been included in the U.S. EPA's National Emissions Inventory. Recent research has chemically-speciated a range of volatile organic vapors emitted from asphalt, including intermediate-volatility and semivolatile organic compounds, at temperatures associated with heated paving processes. Here, we develop a nationwide inventory of asphalt-related emissions, including emissions from both heated and near-ambient temperature processes, and subsequently use the inventory as inputs to a photochemical air quality model to quantify potential impacts on criteria pollutants. Our results suggest that asphalt paving contributes significantly to nationwide volatile organic compound emissions and that these emissions can enhance local, predominantly urban, fine particulate matter concentrations. |
In paving processes, liquid asphalt is mixed with an aggregate and can be applied at near-ambient or heated temperatures. If applied at near-ambient conditions, additional components must be added to lower the viscosity of the mixture.5 Following application, these added components largely evaporate. Cutback asphalt is applied at ambient temperatures and involves mixing asphalt binder and aggregate with petroleum solvents (e.g., naphtha, kerosene, diesel), which vary depending on the desired cure rate. Emulsified asphalt is also applied in ambient conditions and utilizes water-based solvents with an emulsifying agent. In contrast to cutback asphalts, emulsified asphalts have become more common in recent years due to lower emissions of traditional volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and energy savings.5
Hot-mix asphalt is the most common application method for asphalt paving and involves combining liquid asphalt, which is stored hot on-site, with aggregate at a mixture temperature of approximately 150 °C. The mixture is then hauled to the usage site, where it is moved, placed, compacted, and ambiently cooled without the need for added solvents. Warm-mix asphalt is a more recent approach that enables paving to occur using cooler temperature mixtures and constitutes ∼20% of heated asphalt paving.6 Lower paving temperatures require additives (water, organic-based, or a hybrid) to reduce the viscosity of the mixture, but also promote energy savings through reductions in fuel use and are designed to generate fewer organic emissions during application.7
Historically, emissions from cutback and emulsified asphalt have been estimated for the U.S. EPA's National Emissions Inventory (NEI).8 Due to the enhanced organic emissions from their solvent additions, these processes were viewed as the dominant source of reactive organic carbon (ROC) emissions from asphalt paving. Here, ROC is defined as all non-methane organic gases and organic aerosol.9,10 While heat-driven application processes represent most paving activity, it had been assumed that emissions were minimal due to the removal of more volatile compounds during vacuum distillation. Recent research has chemically-speciated a range of volatile organic vapors emitted from asphalt, including intermediate-volatility and semivolatile organic compounds (IVOCs, SVOCs), at temperatures associated with hot-mix, warm-mix, and post-application temperatures.7 The photochemical oxidation of VOCs, IVOCs, and SVOCs, from a mix of anthropogenic and biogenic sources, can lead to the formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA), which is often the dominant component of organic aerosol (OA) in urban environments.11–13 Since fine particulate matter (PM2.5) is associated with impacts on human health and wellbeing,14,15 quantifying these emissions is important for building useful platforms for air quality policy analysis.
In this study, we develop a nationwide inventory of asphalt-related emissions, including emissions from both paving and non-paving processes, test the sensitivity of emissions to uncertain parameters using a Monte Carlo analysis, and subsequently use the inventory as inputs to the Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model. Within CMAQ, this study models the aging and transformation of lower volatility organics using the Community Regional Atmospheric Chemistry Multiphase Mechanism16 (CRACMM). We simulate air quality throughout the continental United States and quantify the potential impacts of asphalt emissions on criteria pollutants (i.e., PM2.5, O3). In addition, we explore trends in historical asphalt usage and estimated emissions by process type to provide context on how air pollutants have evolved from asphalt-related emissions in recent years.
The Asphalt Institute survey1 specifies usage at various state-level aggregations (ranging from 1–3 states). We disaggregate these values to each state using state-specific usage statistics of hot-mix and warm-mix asphalt.6 For roofing asphalt, we allocate usage to the state-level using construction expenditure statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau.17 To further allocate emissions to the county-level, we use estimates of paved vehicular miles traveled for paving and population for non-paving asphalt applications. Temporally, emissions are translated from annual-to-monthly using product supply statistics from the U.S. EIA3 for asphalt processes applied heated and flat for asphalt processes applied under ambient conditions. Further, diurnal profiles are applied to emissions, with a peak at midday and nadir at night.
Emissions from all asphalt processes are estimated during both application and “in-use” periods, with “in-use” representing the emissions occurring at environmental temperatures following the application process. Both application and in-use emission factors for hot- and warm-mix paving asphalts, and roofing asphalt, as well as the in-use emission factors for cutback and emulsified asphalt, are based on measurements from Khare et al.7 Emission factors associated with the application of cutback and emulsified asphalt paving follow the methods used in the U.S. EPA's NEI,8 which are based on compositional information reported in Material Safety Data Sheets.
During the hot-mix application process, the asphalt mixture is applied at elevated temperatures (∼150 °C). Measurements indicate that emissions are highest when heated and decline over time following an exponential decay curve. Like Khare et al.,7 we estimate the application-related emissions over a 5 hours period with, which yields an average emission factor of ∼4 g kg−1 of asphalt binder (Table 1). Warm-mix asphalt application generally occurs at 20–40 °C cooler temperatures. Reducing the asphalt temperature from 140 °C to 120 °C reduces the initial magnitude of emissions by ∼46% (Fig. S5† of Khare et al.7). As such, we adopt an average warm-mix application emission factor of ∼2 g kg−1 asphalt. Cutback and emulsified application emission factors includes a volatilization fraction of 95% for all added solvent components and yields an emission factor of ∼407 g kg−1 asphalt for cutback asphalt and ∼98 g kg−1 asphalt for emulsified asphalt.8 For roofing-related asphalt application, we apply the hot-mix asphalt application emission factor for the limited use of hot roofing application at present day (∼5%) since most roofing asphalt is applied with limited heating.18
Type/process | Usage [Gg asphalt] | Application-related emissions [g kg−1 asphalt] | In-use emissions [g kg−1 asphalt] | Total emissions [g kg−1 asphalt] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hot-mix | 12231 | 4.0 | 1.0 | 5.0 |
Warm-mix | 3182 | 2.2 | 1.0 | 3.2 |
Cutback | 153 | 407 | 1.0 | 408 |
Emulsified | 1960 | 98 | 1.0 | 99 |
Roofing | 2910 | 0.2 | 17.8 | 18 |
In-use emissions continue after application, occur at ambient temperatures, and are influenced by local climate. They are enhanced with elevated surface temperatures and a total of ∼1 g kg−1 were observed over sustained, 82 hours heating at 60 °C, with decaying but continued emissions beyond the timescale of the experiment.7 Asphalt surface temperatures will vary with location, season, and time of day, with some locations more frequently experiencing asphalt surface temperatures ≥60 °C. While these emissions will expectedly vary spatiotemporally, total in-use emission potential for all asphalt paving processes of ∼1 g kg−1 (ref. 7) (Table 1) is applied across the contiguous U.S. In-use roofing asphalt emissions also occur with elevated roof temperatures and a total potential in-use emission factor of 17.8 g kg−1 is used here from prior work.7
Like many sources, emission factors can be expected to vary across asphalt products and processes, with variations due to factors such as production and application methods, duration of application processes, chemical composition, and environmental conditions. As such, emissions measurements from experiments have expectedly yielded a range of values, both larger and smaller than those adopted here, and the inclusion of solar exposure (with or without the presence of a water layer) can greatly enhance emissions.7,19–21 The range of influencing factors all indicate that both application and in-use asphalt-related emissions factors could greatly vary across source category types, though prior work indicates a sizable reservoir of IVOCs and SVOCs in common asphalt binders.22 To incorporate the sensitivity of known and unknown parameters, we employ a Monte Carlo analysis and perform 10000 simulations on emission factor estimates (Fig. 1a–c). Our simulations take random samples within prescribed uncertainty bounds for process-specific asphalt usage, the percent of asphalt binder applied at reduced temperatures (i.e., warm-mix asphalt), and both application and in-use emission factors for all paving activities (Table S1†).
For product usage, we assume there is ±25% uncertainty (95% CI) at the state-level aggregations from the Asphalt Institute survey1 for all asphalt processes (i.e., both paving and non-paving). This is likely conservative as multiple national-level datasets report similar 2018 total asphalt usage. Annual statistics on the amount of asphalt binder applied at warm-mix asphalt temperatures features considerable state-to-state variability, so we apply ±25% uncertainty (95%) to the calculated split between hot- and warm-mix asphalt paving at the state-level. Mean emission factors associated with application follow the methods of Khare et al.,7 which estimates the application-related emissions over a 5 hours period, though these emissions could occur over different timescales depending on conditions and project specifics. However, application timescales may vary based on the distance between the asphalt plant and construction site, environmental conditions, and other variables. To incorporate this uncertainty, we assume application-related emissions from hot-mix asphalt, warm-mix asphalt, and roofing asphalt feature non-negative, skewed lower distributions with a threshold max value equivalent to a 6 h timescale of emission and approximate mean of a 5 h timescale of emission (Fig. S1a and c†). For cutback and emulsified asphalt, we assume the application emission factor uncertainty is ±25% (Fig. S1b†). Measurements associated with in-use emissions featured continued emissions beyond the timescale of the experiment but were capped at a mean of ∼1 g kg−1 for the main analysis. In the Monte Carlo analysis, we assume these emissions are lognormally distributed across the mean value of ∼1 g kg−1 for all paving applications (Fig. S1d and e†) and lognormally distributed with a mean value of ∼17.8 g kg−1 for roofing asphalt (Fig. S1f†).
The speciation of hot-mix, warm-mix, and roofing asphalt emissions used here were reported by Khare et al.7 (Fig. 1), which was focused on C10 and larger compounds and thus does not include C9 and smaller single-ring aromatics that are also SOA precursors. For hot- and warm-mix asphalt, speciation from a test at 140 °C were used for both processes (Fig. 1d). These emissions are dominated by IVOC compounds (3 × 102 μg m−3 < C* < 3 × 106 μg m−3) that span multiple functionalities, including significant quantities of oxygenates, aromatics, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, cyclic alkanes, and straight-chained alkanes. The speciation of roofing asphalt-related emissions utilize the results from a 75 °C experiment to simulate peak daytime roofing temperatures.7 These non-pavement emissions are relatively more volatile on average than the hot- and warm-mix asphalt emissions and are predominantly aromatics, cyclic alkanes, and straight-chained alkanes (Fig. 1f). Cutback asphalts always, and emulsified asphalts sometimes, contain organic solvents that vary based on the desired cure rate.5 These solvents may include gasoline, naphtha, kerosene, and diesel. Here, we assume the organic solvent used in both processes is kerosene (i.e., a medium cure rate solvent), though we acknowledge that the use of diesel or gasoline as solvents would increase the solvent's SOA and/or O3 formation potential. Kerosene is a petroleum-based hydrocarbon blend, largely consisting of C6–C16 branched and straight-chained alkanes, as well as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.23 As such, we utilize a composite profile for lighter fluid from the U.S. EPA's SPECIATE database24 (profile 95820) that fits this chemical description (Fig. 1e) for both cutback and emulsified asphalt speciation. Using the SOA structure activity relationship (SAR) screening tool from Pye et al.,16 the estimated SOA yields from the heated (Fig. 1d), emulsified/cutback (Fig. 1e), and roofing asphalt (Fig. 1f) speciation profiles are 35%, 15%, and 38%, respectively, with variations influenced by the chemical structures of the complex gas-phase precursor mixtures.
The impact of asphalt-related emissions on SOA and ozone is quantified by taking the difference between two photochemical modeling simulations. The first simulation incorporates the newly developed inventory and the second contains no asphalt-related emissions but maintains all other anthropogenic and biogenic emissions. To generate gridded emissions, we allocate county-level emissions using total road miles and low/medium/high development intensity from the National Land Cover Database (NLCD) as proxies for paving and non-paving asphalt applications, respectively.
To evaluate modeling performance, predictions of organic carbon (OC), PM2.5, and the maximum daily 8 hours (MDA8) O3 concentrations from the simulation including the newly developed asphalt-related inventory are compared with observations from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Air Quality System (AQS). The model evaluation is facilitated using the Atmospheric Model Evaluation Tool30 and performance metrics utilize aggregated statistics from Emery et al.31 The performance metrics consider the absolute magnitude of modelled normalized mean bias (NMB) and compare results to top 33rd percentile (“goal”) and top 67th percentile (“criteria”) of past evaluation applications for OC, PM2.5, and MDA8 O3. The top 33rd percentile of OC, PM2.5, and MDA8 O3, NMB are less than ±15%, ±10%, and ±5%, respectively, and the top 67th percentile of NMB for OC, PM2.5, and MDA8 O3 are less than ±50%, ±30%, and ±15%, respectively.
Fig. 2 Distributions of national-level annual emissions estimates from (a) hot- and warm-mix paving asphalt, (b) cutback and emulsified paving asphalt, and (c) roofing asphalt. |
Emulsified asphalt paving is estimated to generate the most asphalt-related emissions of any process (Fig. 2b) despite occurring at ambient temperatures. This is due to both its abundant usage (∼1.9 Tg of liquid asphalt usage) and high application-related emission factor (Fig. S1b†). In 2018, we estimate that emulsified asphalt paving generated ∼193 Gg of organic emissions (95% CI: 143 Gg – 245 Gg). Cutback asphalt paving, which features an extremely large emissions potential per mass usage (Fig. 1b), was estimated to generate ∼62 Gg of organic emissions (95% CI: 46 Gg – 80 Gg). This mass is nearly equivalent to the emissions from hot-mix asphalt paving, despite being only a fraction (∼1%) of the usage (∼153 Gg).
Roofing asphalt, by contrast, are dominated by emissions that occur during the in-use period (∼99%). We estimate that ∼54 Gg of organic emissions (95% CI: 28 Gg – 93 Gg) occurred in 2018 from this process (Fig. 2c). While usage of roofing asphalt (∼2.9 Tg) was ∼4× less than hot-mix asphalt and ∼20× greater than cutback asphalt, emissions from these three processes was roughly equivalent. Nationally, the span of emissions estimates from paving and non-paving processes were predominantly driven by uncertainty associated with application and in-use emission factors, respectively.
Spatially, total potential asphalt-related emissions were highest in Texas (34 Gg) and California (31 Gg). A secondary state-level peak occurred in the upper midwest, where emissions eclipsed 15 Gg in Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Indiana (Fig. S2†). Several less populated states with more sparse highway infrastructure (e.g., Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota), as well as smaller states in the upper Northeast (e.g., New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine), featured total state-level emissions <5 Gg. Due to the allocation methods employed in this analysis (i.e., mostly paved vehicular miles traveled), county-level emissions tend to congregate in the urban centers of each state.
Notably, results for both Texas and Florida indicate very little enhancements of asphalt-related SOA despite considerable emissions (34 Gg and 9 Gg, respectively). The proportion of asphalt-related emissions from heated applications (hot-mix, warm-mix, and roofing), which result in relatively lower volatility components than paving asphalt applied under ambient conditions (Fig. 1), are similar in California, the upper Midwest, and Texas (23–31%). Since emissions from asphalt-related sources are dominated by IVOCs, OA formation pathways predominantly rely upon oxidation of the primary, evaporative vapors. This process can be modulated by the abundance of local oxidants34 and this appears to be the driver of the low asphalt-related SOA in both Texas and Florida (Fig. S4†). For example, the average noontime O3 concentration in both Houston, TX and Orlando, FL was ∼10 ppb less than the concentrations in Los Angeles and New York City.
The influence of asphalt-related emissions on MDA8 O3 also peaked in the summertime but was generally small (Fig. S5†). Outside of Southern California and the urban cores of other major cities, asphalt-related emissions increased summertime MDA8 O3 by <0.1 ppb, and mostly only by <0.01 ppb. According to ground- and satellite-based observations, most of the CONUS outside major urban areas is NOx-limited for O3 formation,35 which is consistent with the small impact of asphalt emissions on O3 seen here. In Los Angeles, the population-weighted, summertime average MDA8 O3 enhancement from asphalt-related emissions is 0.2 ppb. However, like modelled SOA, there is significant day-to-day variation in impacts and enhancements could nearly double (∼0.4 ppb) on select days. Similar enhancements were modelled in the New York City region, though were generally half as large (∼0.1 ppb) in other major cities (e.g., Chicago, Denver) and below 0.01 ppb in most other areas. These concentrations translate to 0.1–0.4% of the modelled, county-level MDA8 O3 in the summertime.
Fig. 4 Estimated 2010–2018 national-scale emissions for all asphalt processes. Note that emissions from emulsified asphalt utilize the secondary (right) y-axis. |
Since cutback asphalt paving features the largest emissions potential (Fig. 1), the usage reduction between 2010 and 2018 continues a decades long decline in overall asphalt-related emissions, both from cutback asphalt and asphalt paving more broadly. In 1975, national VOC emissions from cutback asphalt paving were estimated to be ∼600 Gg,36 which is ∼8× higher than present day emissions from cutback asphalt paving and ∼2× higher than all present-day asphalt paving emissions. All other liquid asphalt processes feature increases in estimated emissions since 2010, driven by increased activity. Heated paving emissions (i.e., hot-mix and warm-mix) have grown, with warm-mix asphalt emissions, which have less emissions per mass of asphalt applied (Fig. 1), outpacing the relative emissions growth from hot-mix asphalt paving. The sustained substitution of emulsified asphalt in place for cutback asphalt for ambient paving applications has driven emulsified asphalt emissions to be the dominant emissions source from liquid asphalt. Similar conclusions were presented in prior National Emission Inventories8 and this trend continues in the present analysis. Emissions from roofing asphalt have also increased since 2010 but are estimated to emit less organics than all other liquid asphalt usage processes.
Emissions from asphalt-related processes undergo oxidation in the atmosphere and form both SOA and O3. The magnitude of both pollutants are highest in the summertime and in the middle of the day when photochemistry peaks, which may also coincide with enhancements in temperature (or solar) dependent emissions of in-use asphalt materials. In several major cities (e.g., Los Angeles, New York City) and in the upper Midwest, asphalt-related emissions increase the summertime population-weighted concentration of anthropogenic SOA, on average, by 0.1–0.2 μg m−3, and can reach up to 0.5 μg m−3 at noontime on select days. In these regions, such concentrations account for 2–4%, on average, of the modelled SOA. In contrast, the influence of asphalt-related emissions on O3 were more localized and generally small. Several major cities feature enhancements of summertime MDA8 O3 on the order of 0.1–0.2 ppb (0.1–0.4% of the modelled MDA8 O3), whereas much of the remaining CONUS features enhancements <0.01 ppb. Interestingly, several states feature sizable quantities of asphalt-related emissions (e.g., Texas and Florida) that do not translate into much asphalt-related SOA due to lower concentrations of oxidants, highlighting the importance of chemistry on SOA formation.
Variability in the magnitude of emissions from asphalt-related materials during application, in-use, and other parts of their complete lifecycle are expected, and may be due to several variables. These variables include, but are not limited to, feedstock composition, production processes, final binder chemical composition, application methods and conditions, pavement or roofing material physical properties, environmental conditions, and aging/weathering. The emission estimates and uncertainty analysis used here, in concert with spatially resolved usage data and photochemical modeling, are intended to contextualize the potential contributions of asphalt-related emissions to air quality, relative to ambient pollutant concentrations and other sources. While uncertainty in the results presented here are reflected in the Monte Carlo analysis, key areas of further research that could better constrain these estimates include future updates to application-related or in-use emission factors for cutback and emulsified asphalt, analysis of potential application-related or in-use emissions from a range of other roofing asphalt products, including those applied at near-ambient temperatures using solvents, allocation of emissions from the state-level to the county-level, temporal allocation of emissions, and chemical aging of the highly functionalized species following emission in photochemical modeling mechanisms. Quantification of application-related emissions from emulsified asphalt would be especially useful since asphalt usage for this process are growing in magnitude (Fig. 4). It is possible the application emission factor adopted here and used in the 2017 NEI is biased high,36 however, given the speciation of emulsified asphalt (predominantly C* > 3 × 105 μg m−3), variation in these emissions should not affect the anthropogenic SOA predictions presented here. In addition, quantification of emissions from production and storage facilities were not specifically included in the sensitivity simulations performed here; both of which may include SOA precursor emissions. Experiments also indicate that emissions from asphalt are amplified following exposure to increased solar irradiance, often with a rise in the fraction of SVOCs (3 × 10−1 μg m−3 < C* < 3 × 102 μg m−3).7 These dependencies were not considered here and could lead to an increased enhancement of SOA on sunny, clear sky days, especially when coupled with high surface temperatures.
Nationally, the emissions presented here (∼380 Gg) have an estimated effective SOA yield of ∼22%, resulting in an estimated SOA potential of ∼85 Gg. Following photochemical transport modeling, this leads to a summertime SOA average of ∼0.1–0.2 μg m−3 in the most densely populated cities of the United States. While modest in magnitude, if on-road tailpipe emissions continue their multidecade decline,18,38,39 the contribution of urban SOA from evaporative sources and other non-traditional sources will grow in relative proportion in the coming years-to-decades.18 Furthermore, while the scale of the modeling implemented here (12 km resolution) is appropriate for estimating the contributions of asphalt emissions to regionally distributed SOA and O3, asphalt-paving activities should not be overlooked when considering the potential impacts of direct emissions at the community-scale. Finally, it should be noted that asphalt application is an intermittent process and the temporal profile of emissions applied in the photochemical modeling performed here likely smoothes the day-to-day enhancements to PM2.5 and O3 from asphalt-related processes.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3ea00066d |
‡ The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views or policies of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The U.S. EPA does not endorse any products or commercial services mentioned in this publication. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |