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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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Field study of the influence of meteorological factors and traffic volumes upon suspended particle mass at urban roadside sites of differing geometries

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured 24-hour averaged concentrations of PM2.5 and PM10 at UK urban sites using dichotomous samplers and found that the traffic increment in particle mass tends to be independent of the magnitude of concentrations.
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Receptor modelling of fine particles in southern England using CMB including comparison with AMS-PMF factors

TL;DR: In this paper, a Chemical Mass Balance (CMB) model was used to estimate PM2.5 emissions at two southern England sites, urban background North Kensington (NK) and rural Harwell (HAR), in January-February 2012.
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Atmospheric chemical transformations of nitrogen compounds measured in the north sea experiment, September 1991

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured airborne concentrations of nitrogen dioxide, nitric acid, ammonia and particulate nitrate, ammonium and sulphate on two ships located 200 km apart on the North Sea such that one was always directly downwind of the other.
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Characterisation and source attribution of the semi-volatile organic content of atmospheric particles and associated vapour phase in Birmingham, UK

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported that the data from this study is in line with that reported in London, UK and in California and showed that the biogenic emissions are appreciable even in British urban areas.

Measurement and modeling of exposure to selected air toxics for health effects studies and verification by biomarkers.

TL;DR: Both the environmental concentrations and personal exposure concentrations measured in this study are lower than those in the majority of earlier published work, which is consistent with the reported application of abatement measures to the control of air toxics emissions.