Jorge H. Amorim
Fil.Dr., luftmiljöforskare och enhetschef vid SMHIs meteorologiska forskningsenhet.

Jorge Amorim
Kontakt och CV
- E-post: jorge.amorim@smhi.se
- Telefon: 011-495 86 41
- Jorge Amorim, CV Pdf, 557.4 kB.
Publikationer
Verksamhetsområde
Modellering av flödes- och transportprocesser i städer, från mikro till den urbana skalan. Forskningen syftar till att bidra med högupplösta klimat- och luftkvalitetsdata för bedömningen av effekterna av värme och luftföroreningar på stadsbefolkningens välbefinnande och hälsa.
Forskningsintressen
- Luftkvalitet i städer och människors exponering
- Urbant klimat och människors komfort
- Urban grön infrastruktur.
Särskild kompetens
Utveckling och utvärdering av numeriska modeller på lokal skalan som beskriver flödes- och transportmekanismer i urbana områden. Organisation och deltagande i mätkampanjer. Projektkoordinering i Sverige och Brasilien.
Senaste publikationer
Local climate, air quality and leaf litter cover shape foliar fungal communities on an urban tree
Maria Faticov, Jorge Humberto Amorim, Ahmed Abdelfattah, Laura J. A. van Dijk, Ana Cristina Carvalho, Isabelle Laforest-Lapointe, Ayco J. M. Tack
Assessing the impacts of physiography refinement on Stockholm summer urban temperature simulated with an offline land surface model
Fuxing Wang, Danijel Belušić, Jorge Humberto Amorim, Isabel Ribeiro
An integrated assessment of the impacts of PM2.5 and black carbon particles on the air quality of a large Brazilian city
Lars Gidhagen, Patricia Krecl, Admir Creso Targino, Gabriela Polezer, Ricardo H. M. Godoi, Erika Felix, Yago A. Cipoli, Isabella Charres, Francisco Malucelli, Alyson Wolf, Marcelo Alonso, David Segersson, Francisco J. Castelhano, Jorge Humberto Amorim, Francisco Mendonca
Sammanfattning
Data on airborne fine particle (PM2.5) emissions and concentrations in cities are valuable for traffic and air quality managers, urban planners, health practitioners, researchers, and ultimately for legislators and decision makers. Emissions and ambient concentrations of PM2.5 and black carbon (BC) were assessed in the city of Curitiba, southern Brazil. The methodology combined a month-long monitoring campaign with both fixed and mobile instruments, development of emission inventories, and dispersion model simulations on different scales. The mean urban background PM2.5 concentrations during the campaign were 7.3 mu g m(-3) in Curitiba city center, but three- to fourfold higher (25.3 mu g m(-3)) in a residential area on the city's outskirts, indicating the presence of local sources, possibly linked to biomass combustion. BC concentrations seemed to be more uniformly distributed over the city, with mean urban background concentrations around 2 mu g m(-3), half of which due to local traffic emissions. Higher mean BC concentrations (3-5 mu g m(-3)) were found along busy roads. The dispersion modeling also showed high PM2.5 and BC concentrations along the heavily transited ring road. However, the lack of in situ data over these peripheral areas prevented the verification of the model output. The vehicular emission factors for PM2.5 and BC from the literature were found not to be suitable for Curitiba's fleet and needed to be adjusted. The integrated approach of this study can be implemented in other cities, as long as an open data policy and a close cooperation among regional, municipal authorities and academia can be achieved.