Formaldehyde Pollution in Ahvaz, Iran: Spatiotemporal Trends and Health Risks

Authors

  • Faezeh Borhani Department of Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran 1411713116, Iran https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2686-6702
  • Mohammad Hashemzadeh Department of Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran 1411713116, Iran
  • Samira Andam Department of Life Science Engineering, Faculty of New Sciences and Technologies, University of Tehran, Tehran 143951561, Iran
  • Seyed Mohsen Mousavi Department of Environmental Planning and Design, Shahid Beheshti University, Tehran 1983969411, Tehran, Iran

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53560/PPASA(62-3)701

Keywords:

Formaldehyde (HCHO), Air Pollutants, Meteorological Conditions, Sentinel-5P, Spatiotemporal, Health Risk Assessment

Abstract

We present a satellite-driven, four-year assessment of formaldehyde (HCHO) over Ahvaz that quantifies its spatiotemporal variability, meteorological controls, and health risk. Using Sentinel-5P/TROPOMI (2019–2022) together with MERRA-2/GLDAS/AIRS fields, we relate HCHO to co-pollutants (CO, NO₂, SO₂) and meteorology (precipitation, temperature, wind speed, relative humidity, dew point) and map hotspots via IDW; health risks are evaluated with RAIS. HCHO correlates positively with temperature (r = 0.92) and negatively with relative humidity (r = -0.84) and precipitation (r = -0.65); the wind-speed link is moderately positive (r = 0.46), with primary co-pollutants are weak (CO: r ≈ 0.08; NO₂: r ≈ -0.02). Interannually, 2020 shows the highest HCHO and 2021 the lowest (annual mean ≈8% lower in 2021), with persistent hotspots along the southeastern industrial corridor. IUR-based lifetime inhalation cancer risk peaks in 2020 at ~506 expected excess cases citywide and is lowest in 2021 at ~468. These quantitative results highlight temperature-driven photochemistry and moisture-related removal as key controls on HCHO and motivate strengthened air-quality management to mitigate exposure and protect public health in Ahvaz.

References

1. A. Bhatnagar. Environmental cardiology: studying mechanistic links between pollution and heart disease. Circulation Research 99(7): 692-705 (2006).

2. Y. Zhang, Y. Yang, X. He, P. Yang, T. Zong, P. Sun, R. Sun, T. Yu, and Z. Jiang. The cellular function and molecular mechanism of formaldehyde in cardiovascular disease and heart development. Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine 25(12): 5358-5371 (2021).

3. S.H. Borsi, G. Goudarzi, G. Sarizadeh, M. Dastoorpoor, S. Geravandi, H.A. Shahriyari, Z.A. Mohammadi, and M.J. Mohammadi. Health endpoint of exposure to criteria air pollutants in ambient air of on a populated in Ahvaz City, Iran. Frontiers in Public Health 10: 869656 (2022).

4. C. Hak, I. Pundt, S. Trick, C. Kern, U. Platt, J. Dommen, C. Ordóñez, A.S. Prévôt, W. Junkermann, C. Astorga-Lloréns, and B.R. Larsen. Intercomparison of four different in-situ techniques for ambient formaldehyde measurements in urban air. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 5(11): 2881-2900 (2005).

5. F.M. Onyije and O.G. Avwioro. Excruciating effect of formaldehyde exposure to students in gross anatomy dissection laboratory. The International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 3(2): 92-95 (2012).

6. Y. Zhang, X. Liu, C. McHale, R. Li, L. Zhang, Y. Wu, X. Ye, X. Yang, and S. Ding. Bone marrow injury induced via oxidative stress in mice by inhalation exposure to formaldehyde. Plos One 8(9): e74974 (2013).

7. M. Delikhoon, M. Fazlzadeh, A. Sorooshian, A.N. Baghani, M. Golaki, Q. Ashournejad, and A. Barkhordari. Characteristics and health effects of formaldehyde and acetaldehyde in an urban area in Iran. Environmental Pollution 242(Part A): 938-951 (2018).

8. A.H. Khoshakhlagh, M. Mohammadzadeh, P. Sicard, and U. Bamel. Human exposure to formaldehyde and health risk assessment: a 46-year systematic literature review. Environmental Geochemistry and Health 46(6): 206 (2024).

9. S.M. Mousavi, N.M. Dinan, S. Ansarifard, G. Darvishi, F. Borhani, and A. Naghibi. Assessing the impact of global carbon dioxide changes on atmospheric fluctuations in Iran through satellite data analysis. Journal of Water and Climate Change 15(6): 2774-2791 (2024).

10. F. Borhani, M.S. Motlagh, A.H. Ehsani, and Y. Rashidi. Evaluation of short-lived atmospheric fine particles in Tehran, Iran. Arabian Journal of Geosciences 15(16): 1398 (2022).

11. M. Hadei, P.K. Hopke, M. Rafiee, N. Rastkari, M. Yarahmadi, M. Kermani, and A. Shahsavani. Indoor and outdoor concentrations of BTEX and formaldehyde in Tehran, Iran: effects of building characteristics and health risk assessment. Environmental Science and Pollution Research 25(27): 27423-27437 (2018).

12. M.H. Dehghani, M. Salari, K. Naddafi, S. Nazmara, E. Ahmadi, and P. Kumar. Evaluation of formaldehyde concentration in the ambient air of a most populated Iranian city, Tehran. Air Quality, Atmosphere & Health 10(6): 763-772 (2017).

13. F. Hedayatzade and N. Hassanzadeh. Occurrence, probable source, and health risk assessment of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylene compounds in ambient urban atmosphere in Ahvaz, Iran. Archives of Hygiene Sciences 9(2): 152-167 (2020).

14. F. Borhani, M.S.Motlagh, A.H. Ehsani, Y. Rashidi, M. Ghahremanloo, M. Amani, and A. Moghimi. Current status and future forecast of short-lived climate-forced ozone in Tehran, Iran, derived from ground-based and satellite observations. Water, Air, & Soil Pollution 234(2): 134 (2023).

15. F. Borhani, A.H. Ehsani, S.L. McGuirk, M.S. Motlagh, S.M. Mousavi, Y. Rashidi, and S.M. Mirmazloumi. Examining and predicting the influence of climatic and terrestrial factors on the seasonal distribution of ozone column depth over Tehran province using satellite observations. Acta Geophysica 72(2): 1191-1226 (2024).

16. GIOVANNI: NASA's Goddard Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center. NASA: Earthdata (2022). https://giovanni.gsfc.nasa.gov/giovanni/

17. F. Borhani, A.A. Pourezzat, and A.H. Ehsani. Spatial distribution of Particulate Matter in Iran from Internal factors to the role of western adjacent countries from political governance to Environmental Governance. Earth Systems and Environment 8(1): 135-164 (2024).

18. F. Borhani and A. Noorpoor. Cancer risk assessment Benzene, Toluene, Ethylbenzene and Xylene (BTEX) in the production of insulation bituminous. Environmental Energy and Economic Research 1(3): 311-320 (2017).

19. U.S. EPA. Exposure Factors Handbook (1997, Final Report). U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC, EPA/600/P-95/002F a-c, (1997). https://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/efp/recordisplay.cfm?deid=12464

20. U.S. EPA. Exposure Factors Handbook 2011 Edition (Final Report). U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC, EPA/600/R-09/052F, (2011). https://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/efp/recordisplay.cfm?deid=236252

21. A.H. Sial, S.Y.S. Rashdi, and A.H. Khan. Comparative analysis of data visualization libraries Matplotlib and Seaborn in Python. International Journal of Advanced Trends in Computer Science and Engineering 10(1): 277-281 (2021).

22. L.A.J. Bastien, N.J. Brown, and R.A. Harley. Contributions to local-and regional-scale formaldehyde concentrations. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 19(13): 8363-8381 (2019).

23. G.P. Ayers, R.W. Gillett, H. Granek, C. De Serves, and R.A. Cox. Formaldehyde production in clean marine air. Geophysical Research Letters 24(4): 401-404 (1997).

24. K. Müller. Determination of aldehydes and ketones in the atmosphere - A comparative long time study at an urban and a rural site in eastern Germany. Chemosphere 35(9): 2093-2106 (1997).

25. Y. Zhang, R. Li, Q. Min, H. Bo, Y. Fu, Y. Wang, and Z. Gao. The controlling factors of atmospheric formaldehyde (HCHO) in Amazon as seen from satellite. Earth and Space Science 6(6): 959-971 (2019).

26. T. Liu, Y. Lin, J. Chen, G. Chen, C. Yang, L. Xu, M. Li, X. Fan, Y. Chen, L. Yin, Y. Chen, X. Ji, Z. Lin, F. Zhang, H. Wang, and Y. Hong. Seasonal characteristics of atmospheric formaldehyde (HCHO) in a coastal city of southeast China: Formation mechanism and photochemical effects. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 2022: 1-28 (2022). https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2022-292

27. F. Vichi, C. Bassani, A. Ianniello, G. Esposito, M. Montagnoli, and A. Imperiali. Formaldehyde Continuous Monitoring at a Rural Station North of Rome: Appraisal of Local Sources Contribution and Meteorological Drivers. Atmosphere 14(12): 1833 (2023).

28. M. Hu, Y. Wang, S. Wang, M. Jiao, G. Huang, and B. Xia. Spatial-temporal heterogeneity of air pollution and its relationship with meteorological factors in the Pearl River Delta, China. Atmospheric Environment 254: 118415 (2021).

29. S.K. Kuhpar, G. Janbazghobadi, and S. Motevali. Spatial Analysis of Bioclimatic Vulnerability of heat wave hazard in Ahwaz city Pilot. Journal of Climate Research 1400(48): 85-98 (2022).

30. J. Kuttippurath, K. Abbhishek, G.S. Gopikrishnan, and M. Pathak. Investigation of long–term trends and major sources of atmospheric HCHO over India. Environmental Challenges 7: 100477 (2022).

31. S. Dhankar and B. Pani. Spatio-temporal analysis of formaldehyde and its association with atmospheric and environmental variables over the Southeast Asian region using satellite data. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 197(2): 185 (2025).

Downloads

Published

2025-09-24

How to Cite

Faezeh Borhani, Mohammad Hashemzadeh, Samira Andam, & Seyed Mohsen Mousavi. (2025). Formaldehyde Pollution in Ahvaz, Iran: Spatiotemporal Trends and Health Risks. Proceedings of the Pakistan Academy of Sciences: A. Physical and Computational Sciences, 62(3), 221–233. https://doi.org/10.53560/PPASA(62-3)701

Issue

Section

Research Articles

Similar Articles

<< < 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.