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Roy M. Harrison

Researcher at University of Birmingham

Publications -  820
Citations -  53635

Roy M. Harrison is an academic researcher from University of Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aerosol & Particulates. The author has an hindex of 110, co-authored 777 publications receiving 47175 citations. Previous affiliations of Roy M. Harrison include Lancaster University & University of Düsseldorf.

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Four-year assessment of ambient particulate matter and trace gases in the Delhi-NCR region of India

TL;DR: In this article, the authors obtained the spatiotemporal characteristics of daily-averaged particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5) and trace gases (NOX,O3,SO2, and CO) within a network of 12 air quality monitoring stations located over 2000 km2 across Delhi-NCR from January 2014 to December 2017.
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polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbon concentrations in road dust and soil samples collected in the united kingdom and pakistan

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in soil, surface and road dusts and air from various locations in Birmingham (UK) and Lahore (Pakistan).
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Environmental and biological monitoring of exposures to PAHs and ETS in the general population

TL;DR: ETS is a significant source of inhalation exposure to the carcinogen 1,3-butadiene and high molecular weight PAHs, many of which are carcinogenic, and that for lower molecular weightPAHs such as naphthalene, exposure by routes other than inhalation predominate, since metabolite levels correlated poorly with personal exposure air sampling.
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A Study of the Size Distributions and the Chemical Characterization of Airborne Particles in the Vicinity of a Large Integrated Steelworks

TL;DR: In this article, an atmospheric measurement campaign took place in the spring of 2006 to characterize the emission of particles from an integrated iron and steelmaking site, where the PM 10 daily limit value of 50 μ g m − 3 was not exceeded during any day.
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Interpretation of particulate elemental and organic carbon concentrations at rural, urban and kerbside sites

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report that at all times of year non-traffic sources of particulate organic carbon, be they primary or secondary, are dominant over traffic emissions in the urban background.