c/EPA United States Industrial Environmental Research EPA-600/7-80-092 Environmental Protection Laboratory May 1980 Agency Research Triangle Park NC 27711 Fine Particle Emissions Information System: Annual Report (1979) Interagency Energy/Environment R&D Program Report ------- RESEARCH REPORTING SERIES Research reports of the Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, have been grouped into nine series. These nine broad cate- gories were established to facilitate further development and application of en- vironmental technology. Elimination of traditional grouping was consciously planned to foster technology transfer and a maximum interface in related fields. The nine series are: 1. Environmental Health Effects Research 2. Environmental Protection Technology 3. Ecological Research 4. Environmental Monitoring 5. Socioeconomic Environmental Studies 6. Scientific and Technical Assessment Reports (STAR) 7. Interagency Energy-Environment Research and Development 8. "Special" Reports 9. Miscellaneous Reports This report has been assigned to the INTERAGENCY ENERGY-ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT series. Reports in this series result from the effort funded under the 17-agency Federal Energy/Environment Research and Development Program. These studies relate to EPA's mission to protect the public health and welfare from adverse effects of pollutants associated with energy sys- tems. The goal of the Program is to assure the rapid development of domestic energy supplies in an environmentally-compatible manner by providing the nec- essary environmental data and control technology. Investigations include analy- ses of the transport of energy-related pollutants and their health and ecological effects; assessments of, and development of, control technologies for energy systems; and integrated assessments of a wide range of energy-related environ- mental issues. EPA REVIEW NOTICE This report has been reviewed by the participating Federal Agencies, and approved for publication. Approval does not signify that the contents necessarily reflect the views and policies of the Government, nor does mention of trade names or commercial products constitute endorsement or recommendation for use. This document is available to the public through the National Technical Informa- tion Service, Springfield, Virginia 22161. ------- EPA-600/7-80-092 May 1980 Fine Particle Emissions Information System: Annual Report (1979) by J.P. Reider and R.F. Hegarty Midwest Research Institute 425 Volker Boulevard Kansas City, Missouri 64110 Contract No. 68-02-2641 Program Element No. EHE624A EPA Project Officer: Gary L Johnson Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory Office of Environmental Engineering and Technology Research Triangle Park, NC 27711 Prepared for U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY Office of Research and Development Washington, DC 20460 ------- PREFACE This report was prepared for the Environmental Protection Agency Indus- trial Environmental Research Laboratory in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, under Contract No. 68-02-2641 (MRI Project No. 4396-L). The Environ- mental Protection Agency project officer was Mr. Gary L. Johnson. The work was performed in the Environmental Systems Department of Midwest Research Institute. Mr. M. P. Schrag, Director of the Department, served as program manager, and Mr. J. Patrick Reider, Associate Environmental Engineer, served as project leader. This report was written by Mr. Reider and Dr. R. F. Kegarty of Midwest Research Institute. The authors appreciate the contributions made to the program by Mr. T. Sutikno, Assistant Engineer, Mr. F. N. Young of MRI Systems, Inc., and Mr. Gary L. Johnson, the EPA Project Officer. Approved for: MIDWEST RESEARCH INSTITUTE M. P. Schrag, Director Environmental Systems Department iii ------- CONTENTS Preface ill Figures • • • vi Tables vi 1.0 Introduction 1 1. 1 Origin of the FPEIS 1 1.2 Original FPEIS data base structure and organization . 2 1.3 Revised FPEIS data base 3 1.4 FPEIS technology transfer 9 2.0 Data Base Modification 10 3.0 1979 Data Additions 21 4.0 FPEIS Data Base Summary 27 5.0 Plans for 1980 36 5. 1 Data acquisition 36 5.2 Data base modifications 36 5.3 FPEIS data retrofit 37 5.4 Technology transfer 37 5.5 New user software 38 References 40 Appendix - FPEIS Data Base Summary (as of December 31, 1979) A-1 ------- FIGURES Number 1.1 Original FPEIS conceptual structure . 4 1.2 Revised FPEIS structure 6 2.1 Relationships between data groups of the old and new FPEIS. . . 13 5.1 CIDRS software 39 TABLES Number Page 1.1 Original FPEIS Data Elements 5 1.2 FPEIS Data Elements and Their Organization Levels 7 2.1 New or Redefined Elements of Group A - Source Description ... 12 2.2 New or Redefined Elements of Group D - Control Device/Treatment Process 14 2.3 New or Redefined Elements of Group C - Stream Characteristics . 14 2.4 New or Redefined Elements of Group E - Test Identification. . . 15 2.5 New Elements of Group F - Fuels and Feedstocks 17 2.6 New Elements of Group K - Component 17 2.7 New Elements of Group L - Inorganic Analysis/Nonlevel 1 Organic Analysis 18 2.8 New Elements of Group M - Level 1 Organic Analysis 18 2.9 New Elements of Group R - Radionuclide Data 19 2.10 New Elements of Group T - Bioassay Data 19 2.11 New or Redefined Elements of Group H - Sampling Activity Description 20 3.1 Source Category - 1979 Entries. 22 3.2 Type of Operation - 1979 Entries 22 3.3 Feed Material Class - 1979 Entries 22 3.4 Operating Mode Class - 1979 Entries 23 3.5 Control Device Class - 1979 Entries 23 3.6 Control Device Category - 1979 Entries 24 3.7 Control Device Commercial Name - 1979 Entries 24 3.8 Measurement Instrument/Method Name - 1979 Entries 25 3.9 Chemical Species - 1979 Entries 26 4.1 Summary of Source Category 26 4.2 Summary of Type of Operation 28 4.3 Summary of Feed Material Class 29 vi ------- TABLES (concluded) 4.4 Summary of Operating Mode Class 30 4.5 Summary of Control Device Class 31 4.6 Summary of Control Device Category 32 4.7 Summary of Control Device Commercial Name 33 4.8 Summary of Measurement/Instrument Name 34 4.9 Summary of Chemical Species 35 vii ------- SECTION 1.0 INTRODUCTION The Fine Particle Emissions Information System (FPEIS) is a computerized data base which contains information on primary fine particle emissions from stationary sources. The purpose of the FPEIS is to provide a centralized source of fine particle sizing data for use by engineers and scientists en- gaged in particulate control technology development and in the environmental assessment of energy and industrial processes. Following several months of testing and development, the FPEIS was declared operational in January 1977 and has since become a source of particle sizing data routinely used by various offices of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), contractors, and others. In May 1979, the first FPEIS Annual Report was published. It reviewed and discussed data base activities in 1978. The purpose of this annual report is to describe the changes made to the FPEIS during 1979 and to outline plans for further development of the FPEIS data base in 1980. 1.1 ORIGIN OF THE FPEIS To describe the evolution of the FPEIS to its present form, it is neces- sary to examine briefly its origin. Development of the FPEIS was initiated in early 1975 principally to update the Fine Particle Emissions Inventory (1) which had been developed by Midwest Research Institute (MRI) for EPA in 1971. In the years following publication of the Fine Particle Emissions Inventory, several questions had been raised about the validity of the data since there were limitations in the then-existing sampling techniques. Advances in par- ticle sizing measurement technology and growth in fine particle sampling ac- tivities prompted EPA's Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory at Research Triangle Park, North Carolina (IERL/RTP) to initiate a comprehensive revision of the MRI Fine Particle Emissions Inventory. Early in the inventory revision work, the decision was made to develop a computerized inventory; thus, the concept of the FPEIS was born. In addition to fine particle sizing data, the FPEIS was designed to contain a broad, yet comprehensive description of the entire sampling activity. This description included source process information, control device characteristics, discus- sion of the sampling equipment or methods used to collect the data, and the ------- results of any physical, chemical, or biological analyses performed on the collected samples. Such data enabled the user to evaluate more effectively the emissions data relative to specific user objectives. For orderly and rapid retrieval of information and for compatibility with other EPA data bases, the FPEIS used the same source categorization scheme as was used in the National Emissions Data System (NEDS) (i.e., the Source Classification Codes) (2). Also, the FPEIS utilized the SAROAD/SOTDAT (3) pollutant codes to de- scribe the chemical species identified. In addition, a standard protocol for terminology and units was established for selected data not addressed by other existing data systems to be stored in the FPEIS. This protocol has since been modified to reflect changes in user requirements. During the past 4 years, extensive documentation on the FPEIS has been issued to the data base user community. The first set of documents, which included the FPEIS User Guide (4) and the FPEIS Reference Manual (5), was published in June 1976. That first edition of the documentation, which de- scribed in detail the use of the FPEIS, was widely distributed. A second edition that completely replaced the first one was published in June 1978 and received even wider interest and distribution. From the time that the FPEIS became operational in January 1977 and through December 1979, the FPEIS has experienced steady growth in the number and diversity of its users and in the quantity of information stored. Re- quests for information from researchers, academicians, and others have num- bered in excess of 10 per month for the last 3 years. In those 36 months, the number of site tests reported has tripled, and the number of sampling runs has increased substantially. This increase reflects the growth of R&D interest in fine particle emissions and their control. Indications are that this growth will continue as environmental considerations related to particle sizing evolve into regulations. 1.2 ORIGINAL FPEIS DATA BASE STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION The basic FPEIS data set may be defined as a group of discrete sampling events which describes fine particle sizing activities on a single particle- laden gas stream at a specified site and for a specified period of time. This data set is called a test series. Each FPEIS test series is identified by a unique test series number by which it may be referenced in the data base. In the most basic sense, the test series describes a site test. Consideration of the time period of the testing is imposed to differentiate among separate tests at the same site. The fundamental unit of the data structure is the test run, which de- scribes a single, discrete sampling event with a specified measurement instru- ment or technique. Since it is commonplace to group data according to the ------- sampling location, e.g., control device inlet or outlet, or according to var- iations in process conditions, the test runs are grouped into test subseries. This provides a more orderly sorting or retrieval of data. The designation of a test subseries may vary among test series and is left to the discretion of the encoder of the data. The structure of the FPEIS as it was originally con- ceptualized is given in Figure 1.1, which shows the groups of data types by structural level. Originally, the FPEIS data were grouped in five general categories, as shown in Table 1.1. These categories included source characteristics and test series information; control system description; process characteristics; bio- logical, physical, and chemical analyses; and particle size measurement equip- ment and data. Table 1.1 also identifies the specific data elements contained in each group of data when the data base was established. Many of the original data elements have since been changed or deleted, and other data elements have been added as the FPEIS has evolved. 1.3 REVISED FPEIS DATA BASE The FPEIS was intended to provide a central source of -fine particle size distribution data for use by engineers and scientists engaged in particulate control technology development and in the environmental assessment of energy systems and industrial processes. Even though the FPEIS is only 3 years old, it has been extremely well received by the user community. This acceptance of the importance of the FPEIS led to a desire on the part of EPA and other users for similar data bases covering solid, liquid, and gaseous emissions. With FPEIS as the model, the Environmental Assessment Data Systems (EADS) were developed as a group of independent, computerized data bases interlinked to provide common accessibility to data produced by a variety of EPA projects. The FPEIS, of course, was the first of the data bases in EADS. The others are the Gaseous Emissions Data System (9) (GEDS), the Liquid Effluents Data System (10) (LEDS), and the Solid Discharge Data System (11) (SDDS). The FPEIS was used as a basic model for the other data bases, but its structural organization, designed as it was for fine particle emissions data, was not flexible enough to handle in a proper manner data expected for the other data systems. Since all of the data bases in EADS were to be interlinked, a major restructuring of FPEIS was performed rather than trying to force the other data base systems into the FPEIS structure. The restructuring was accomplished in 1979. The EADS/FPEIS structure consists of four levels: test series, effluent stream design, test operating, and the sample, as shown in Figure 1.2. The test series level, the uppermost level when taken in its broadest contest, designates the sampling activities performed at a single site over a specified period of time. Next is the effluent stream design level where each stream that has been sampled is fully described with regard to the stream and ------- SOURCE CHARACTERISTICS TEST SERIES LEVEL CONTROL SYSTEM PROCESS CHARACTERISTICS CHEMICAL ANALYSIS RESULTS TEST SUBSERIES LEVEL PHYSICAL PROPERTIES. BIOASSAY RESULTS SAMPLING CHARACTERISTICS COLLECTED SAMPLE TEST RUN LEVEL Figure 1.1. Original FPEIS conceptual structure. ------- TABLE 1.1 ORIGINAL FPEIS DATA ELEMENTS SOURCE CHARACTERISTICS Source Category Type of Operation Feed Material Class Operating Mode Class Source Name Site Name UTM Zone Location and Coordinates Source Address (Street, City, State, Zip Code) Test Series Remarks CONTROL DEVICES Generic Device Type Device Category Device Commercial Name Manufacturer Device Description Design Spec. - Type and Value Operating Parameter - Type and Value PROCESS CHARACTERISTICS Subseries Number Subseries Test Date Subseries Start and Finish Time Sampling Location and Description Source Operating Mode Source Operation Rate Feed Material Composition Volumetric Flow Rate Gas Temp, and Pressure at Samp. Loc. Moisture Content Percent Isokinetic Sampling Gas Composition Trace Gases in ppm Subseries Remarks BIOASSAY TESTING, CHEMICAL ANALYSES PHYSICAL PROPERTIES Mass Train—Total Mass Cone. Mass Train—Front Half Mass Cone. Mass Train Comments Bioassay Test Type Bioassay Test Remarks and Results SAROAD Chemical ID Chemical Analysis Method Cone, in Range above 10 (jm Cone, in Range 10 to 1 pra Cone, in Range 1 to 0.1 pm Cone, in Range 0.1 to 0.01 \Jtrn Cone, in Range Below 0.01 pm Filter/Total Concentration PARTICLE SIZE EQUIPMENT AND DATA Run Number Measurement Equipment Type Size Range Lower and Upper Limit Substrate Sampling Start Time and Duration Sampling Flow Rate Dilution Factor Sampling Train Temp, and Pressure Percentage Moisture Particle Diameter Basis Concentration Basis Upper Diameter Boundary Density - Value and How Determined Resistivity - Value and How Determined Physical Properties Comments Run Comments Diameter Boundary Concentration ------- Source Test Series Level Stream Stream 1 Stream 2 Design Level Test Testl I Sample 1 Sample 2 I Sample 3 Test 2 Sample 1 • Testa I Sample 1 Sample 2 Testl Swnplo i 1 Sample 2 Operating LeVel* Samtole s^.. i Level *Each test could be at a different process (source) operating condition. Figure 1.2. Revised FPEIS structure. ------- control device design parameters. The test operating level is where the source operating conditions are defined along with a complete characterization of the fuels and feedstocks used. The last level of the revised EADS/FPEIS structure is the sample level, which details each discrete sample with complete physical, chemical, radionuclide, and bioassay analysis data. As shown in Table 1.2, the present FPEIS organization is based on four levels instead of three. The fourth level reports comprehensive analytical data including laboratory quality assurance and quality control information. With the addition of the fourth level, the FPEIS now contains data with a much greater degree of comprehensiveness and descriptiveness. This added detail reflects an increased need by the user community for complete character- ization of the aerosol. The rationale behind these changes and the specifics of each change are discussed in Section 2 of this report. Another edition of the FPEIS documentation, superceding all previous documentation, will be issued in May 1980. The key documents are the EADS: FPEIS User Guide (6), EADS: Systems Overview Manual (7), and the EADS: Terminology Reference Manual (8). A number of the March 1980 documents were published in loose-leaf notebooks and have been issued to selected routine users on a numbered basis. These registered copies will be updated auto- matically as changes in the data base documentation are implemented. This procedure ensures that routine users of the FPEIS will have access to current documentation. Other users will receive updates through a quarterly publica- tion, the first of which will be issued in the summer of 1980. 1.4 FPEIS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER The FPEIS brochure, which has been an effective means of introducing the FPEIS to the public, was updated in May 1979. The introductory brochure was prepared for distribution at the Air Pollution Control Association Annual Meeting in Cincinnati, Ohio, in June 1979 and at numerous other meetings and symposia. A technical paper on the FPEIS was presented to the APCA Annual Meeting in Cincinnati, Ohio which summarized recent additions and changes to the FPEIS. Several EADS user symposia and training seminars were conducted this year for EPA contractors and for other organizations considering using the FPEIS. The 2-day symposia outlined the purpose of the data base, how to use it, data base structure and organization, and encoding instructions for the EADS multimedia waste stream data bases. In the training seminars, an FPEIS case study of a coal-fired utility boiler was used as an example for encoding practice. Symposia were held in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina in August; and in Long Beach, California; Palo Alto, California; and Cincinnati, Ohio; all in October 1979. The people who attended the symposia represented a wide variety of interests, including EPA personnel and private industry. 7 ------- TABLE 1.2. FPEIS DATA ELEMENTS AND TflEIR ORGANIZATIONAL LEVELS Test Series Level Effluent Stream Design Level Test Operating Level Sample Level 00 A. Source Description Source category Source type Product/device type SIC code Process type Design process rate and units Feed material category Source name Site name and address GEDS, and LEDS TSN's Series start and finish dates Sponsor organization Contract number TO/TD number Name of sampling group/contractor Reference title, author, number publication date, and NTIS number B. Test Series Comments C. Stream Characteristics (Design) E. Test Identification Flow rate and units Velocity Temperature Pressure Moisture Stack height Stream name Comments Control Device or Treatment Storage/Recovery Process Generic device/process type Design type Specific process/device type Device/process class Commercial name Manufacturer Device/process keywords Design parameters analysis Date Start and end times Operating mode Percent design capacity Device operating parameters Comments F. Fuels and Feedstocks Source feed material and units and rate Sample mass and units Laboratory name and approval Feed sample volume and units Proximate analysis Ultimate analysis Physical characteristics Inorganic and organic K. analysis Comments characteristics H. Sampling Activity Description Measurement instrument/method nuaber Start time and duration Measured stream: Flow rate Velocity Temperature Pressure Moisture Density determination Sample volume Flow rate and units Flow rate measurement method Sample mass and units Sampling location description Collection surface/substrate Comments (continued) Component of Sampling Measurement Method Component name Chemical analysis laboratory name Chemical lab approval Radionuclide lab approval Component aliquot mass/volume and units Effluent characteristics Parameter Value and units Analysis method Detection limits Inorganic Analysis/non-Level Organic Analysis Species Analysis method Detection limits Concentration Comments ------- Test Series Level TABLE 1.2. (continued) Effluent Stream Design Level Test Operating Level Sample Level VO M. Level Organic Analysis Fraction ID TCO Grav Species Analysis method Detection limits Concentration Comments R. Radionuclide Data Radionuclide ID Analytical method Detection limits Concentration Comments T. Bioassay Data Test type Test name Duration Laboratory sample ID Laboratory name and approval Test start and end dates Sample quantity and units Test organism/strains Type of value, value, and units Confidence limits Maximum applicable dose and units Level of toxicity Bacteria mutagenicity response Minimum effective concentration and units Approximate concentration factor Comments ------- SECTION 2.0 DATA BASE MODIFICATIONS In 1978, only minor modifications of the FPEIS data base were implemented; for the most part, these changes were designed to increase its usability. The data base structure and the organization of the data within that structure were not affected. In 1979, however, major restructuring and redefining of the FPEIS data base were undertaken. Such a complete overhaul of FPEIS had not been anticipated and was not the result of any flaw in the system. On the contrary, the need to restructure FPEIS was due in large part to its success. The most fundamental modification in the FPEIS was the organization of the data into four structural levels instead of three. The concept of test series, subseries, and run levels, as used in the FPEIS until 1979, is fully explained in the User Guide (4). Organization of data within these levels was more than sufficient for fine particle emissions studies, but such a structure put undesired restrictions on the handling of solid waste, gaseous emissions, or liquid effluent data. So, a more flexible four-level structure was adopted: the test series level; the stream design level; the test operating level; and the sample level. The main difference between the restructured FPEIS and the old FPEIS is that the data on control device characteristics are no longer at the test series level. Instead, the stream design and test operating levels replace the old subseries level, and the control device characteristics have been moved to the stream design level. This move of the control device data to a lower level gives the new FPEIS its increased flexibility, since now one test series can include data taken on many effluent streams with many different control devices. Under the old structure, multiple test series would have had to be defined for one source if more than one effluent stream with different control devices were monitored. With the restructured FPEIS, the source, not the effluent stream or the control devices, determines the designation of a new test series. The shift of the control device data to a lower level is not the only or- ganizational change. The test data that were considered appropriate for the subseries level in the old FPEIS are now divided among stream design, test operating, and sample levels, while the data which were reported at the run 10 ------- level are now entered at the sample level. In addition, data taken under the EPA Level 1 Environmental Assessment protocol are now more easily handled by the data base. Figure 2.1 shows in a general way how data element groupings in the old data base have been accounted for in the restructured FPEIS. A more detailed discussion of the shifting and redefining of the FPEIS data elements follows. As shown in Figure 2.1, data group A, Source Characteristics, which was formerly at the test series level, is data group A, Source Description, at the new test series level. Not just the name of the data group changed, however. The Source Classification Codes (SCC) are no longer used to characterize the source. Instead, more usable standard nomenclature has been adopted with the result that the coding of data should be much easier and more uniform. Along with the change in the use of standard nomenclature, several of the data ele- ments were modified. Table 2.1 shows the new data elements of data group A, Source Description. For each new data element listed, the old data elements, if any, are given. As can be seen from Table 2.1, the new data elements offer a more complete description of the source and how the data were gathered. Two elements in the old data base were dropped. Operating mode class (SCC IV) was no longer useful in characterizing the source, while UTM zone location and coordinates were seldom entered by users and thus were deemed no longer important. Regarding UTM, the nature of the R&D mission places far greater emphasize emissions from generic process sources than on the location of a specific process. That is to say, R&D has a broader scope in mind by looking at industry as a whole rather than individual sites. Data group B, Test Series Remarks, remains unchanged at the test series level. As mentioned, the data elements used to describe the control device char- acteristics were moved in the new FPEIS from the test series level to the ef- fluent stream design level. Table 2.2 shows the data elements belonging to the new data group D, with the corresponding old elements. As is shown in Figure 2.1, some of the data elements originally belonging to data group D, Test Characteristics, at the subseries level were moved to data group C, Stream Characteristics, at the effluent stream design level. Table 2.3 lists those data elements belonging to the new data group C, with the corresponding old elements. Most of the remaining data elements of the old group D have been put into data group E, Test Identification, at the test operating level. Table 2.4 lists the data elements belonging to data group E and the corresponding old data elements, if any. 11 ------- ORIGINAL DATA GROUPS NEW DATA GROUPS Test Series Subseries Run Source Characteristics A Test Series Remarks B Control Device Characteristics C Test Characteristics Particulate Mass Train Results Particulate Physical Properties Bioassay Data Chemical Composition Measurement Particulars Particulate Size Distribution A Source Description B Test Series Comments C Stream Characteristics D Control Device/Process Test Identification Fuels and Feed Stocks Sampling Activity Description Component Inorganic/Non-Level 1 Organic Analysis Level 1 Organic Analysis Radionuclide Data Bioassay Data Test Series Stream Design Test " Operating - Sample Figure 2.1. Relationships between data groups of the old and new FPE1S. ------- TABLE 2.1. NEW OR REDEFINED ELEMENTS OF GROUP A - SOURCE DESCRIPTION EADS/FPEIS elements Original FPEIS elements Source category Source type Product/device type Process type Design process rate and units Feed material category Source name Site name and address Series start and finish dates Sponsor organization Contract number TO/TD number Name of sampling group. Reference title, author, number, publication date, NTIS number Source category Type of operation Feed material class Source name Site name, source address Test series start and finish dates Tested by Reference 13 ------- TABLE 2.2. NEW OR REDEFINED ELEMENTS OF GROUP D - CONTROL DEVICE/TREATMENT PROCESS EADS/FPEIS elements Original FPEIS element Generic device/process type Design type Specific process/device type Device/process class Commercial name Manufacturer Device/process keywords Design parameters Generic device type Device class and category Device commercial name Manufacturer Description Design parameter type and value TABLE 2.3. NEW OR REDEFINED ELEMENTS OF GROUP C - STREAM CHARACTERISTICS EADS/FPEIS elements Original FPEIS element Flow rate and units Velocity Temperature Pressure Moisture Stack height Stream name Comments Volume flow rate Velocity Temperature Pressure Moisture content Sampling location and its description Subseries remarks ------- TABLE 2.4. NEW OR REDEFINED ELEMENTS OF GROUP E - TEST IDENTIFICATION EADS/FPEIS elements Original FPEIS element Date Start and end times Operating mode Percent design capacity Operating parameters Test date Start and finish time Source operating mode Percent design capacity Source operating rate 15 ------- The original FFEIS data base contained only a few data elements related to feed material and its chemical and physical properties, including feed ma- terial and its composition, front half and total mass concentration, resistiv- ity, chemical entry code, chemical analysis method and ID, concentration in filter/total, and concentration in ranges 1 through 8. These elements were contained in data groups D, E, F, and H at the subseries level. The new FPEIS contains these data elements, along with many more. For example, Table 2.5 lists the data elements belonging to F, Fuels and Feedstocks, at the test operating level. Almost all of these data elements are new and contain more information than the old FPEIS could handle. More chemical and physical properties are contained in data groups K, Component, and L, Inorganic Analysis/Nonlevel 1 Organic Analysis. Table 2-6 lists the data elements belonging to data group K, and Table 2.7 lists the data elements of data group L. Both data groups belong to the sample level of the new FPEIS and contain virtually all new data elements. Three new data groups have been added to the sample level of FPEIS. Data group M includes data elements related to the EPA Level '1 Organic Analysis protocol, and data group R contains radionuclide information. These data elements are shown in Tables 2.8 and 2.9, respectively. The old FPEIS con- tained a data group G at the subseries level, which was to contain bioassay information but which never had data elements defined. The new FPEIS contains newly defined data elements related to bioassay information in data group T. These elements are listed in Table 2.10. Most of the data elements belonging to data groups I, Measurement Par- ticulars, and J, Particulate Size Distribution, of the run level in the old FPEIS have been moved to data group H of the sample level in the new FPEIS. In addition, four elements which had been located at the old subseries level— percent isokinetic sampling, density, density determination, and gas analysis and trace gas composition—are also now found in data group H of the data base. Table 2.11 lists the data elements which made up this data group. As discussed, the new FPEIS data base is more comprehenisve in its des- cription of the source and the control and measurement devices and techniques, and in its handling of the data from the various possible physical and chemical analyses. It is more flexible because it is now source-specific and no longer requires a new test series for each new stream from the same source. The new EADS/FPEIS is expected to be even more valuable to the user community than its predecessor because, with its new structure, it is compatible with the other data bases which now make up the EADS. 16 ------- TABLE 2.5. NEW ELEMENTS OF GROUP F - FUELS AND FEEDSTOCKS EADS/FPEIS elements Original FPEIS element Source feed material and rate Sample mass and units Laboratory name and approval Feed sample volume and units Proximate analysis Ultimate analysis Inorganic and organic analysis Physical parameters Comments TABLE 2.6. NEW ELEMENTS OF GROUP K - COMPONENT EADS/FPEIS elements Original FPEIS element Component name Stage/filter cut size Mass/No, concentration Chemical analysis laboratory name Chemical laboratory approval Radionuclide laboratory approval Component mass/volume Effluent characteristics Parameter Value and units Analysis method Detection limits Comments 17 ------- TABLE 2.7. NEW ELEMENTS OF GROUP L - INORGANIC ANALYSIS/ NONLEVEL 1 ORGANIC ANALYSIS EADS/FPEIS elements Original FPEIS element Species I.D. Analysis method Detection limits Concentration Comments TABLE 2.8 NEW ELEMENTS OF GROUP M - LEVEL 1 ORGANIC ANALYSIS EADS/FPEIS elements Original FPEIS element Fraction ID TCO Grav Species I.D. Analysis method Detection limits Concentration Comments 18 ------- TABLE 2.9 NEW ELEMENTS OF GROUP R - RADIONUCLIDE DATA EADS/FPEIS elements Original FPEIS element Radionuclide ID Analytical Method Detection Limit Concentration Comments TABLE 2.10. NEW ELEMENTS OF GROUP T - BIOASSAY DATA EADS/FPEIS elements Original FPEIS element Test type Test name Duration Sample number Laboratory name and approval Test start and end dates Sample quantity and units Test organism/strains Type of value, value, and units Confidence limits Maximum applicable dose and units Level of toxicity Bacteria mutagenicity response and units Approximate concentration factor Comments 19 ------- TABLE 2.11. NEW OR REDEFINED ELEMENTS OF GROUP H - SAMPLING ACTIVITY DESCRIPTION EADS/FPEIS elements Original FPEIS elements Measurement instrument/method name Start time and duration Measured stream Flow rate Velocity Temperature Pressure Moisture Density Density determination Sample volume Flow rate measurement method Sample mass and units Sampling location description Percentage isokinetic C02, 02, CO, N2 Dilution factor Particle diameter basis Particulate concentration basis Upper diameter boundary Trace gases Collection surface/substrate comments Measurement instrument/method name Measurement start time and period Sample flow rate Temperature Pressure Moisture content Density Density determination Percent isokinetic sampling Gas analysis Dilution factor Particle diameter basis Concentration basis Upper boundary Trace gas composition Comments 20 ------- SECTION 3.0 1979 DATA ADDITIONS The FPEIS data base continued growing in 1979; 46 new test series were added to the 120 already contained in the system, a 38% increase. The number of individual test measurements or runs increased; 914 runs were added to the original 1,907 runs, representing an increase of 48%. The data additions listed throughout this section pertain to test data submitted for permanent entry to FPEIS in 1979. The frequency of occurrence is given for each value. The number of test series or runs and the data sources indicate that energy systems source testing was the predominant source of data added to FPEIS in 1979. This is shown in Table 3.1 and 3.2, the Source Category and Type of Operation data base entries for 1979. Of the new entries, electricity generation represented the most frequent operation. The 1979 data acquisitions also included 12 Feed Material Class entries, and 15 Operating Mode Class additions. These new entries are shown in Table 3.3 and 3.4, respectively. Table 3.5 shows that the particulate control equipment data entries were mostly concerned with conventional control devices (mechanical collectors, fabric filters, scrubbers, and electrostatic precipitators (ESPs)); however, several experimental devices were reported. The new entries for Control De- vice Category and Control Device Commercial Name are listed in Tables 3.6 and 3.7, respectively. The variety of control device information entered in FPEIS in 1979 indicates there are no obvious trends in the types of control equip- ment applied to specific types of fine particle emission sources. Table 3.8 lists the 14 Measurement Instrument/Method Names that were among the data acquired last year. The variety of instruments listed does not reflect the 622% increase in the amount of chemical data added to FPEIS primarily due to the extensive analytical results reported in EPA EA Level 1 testing performed with SASS train sampling systems. The amount of chemical data grew tremendously. As shown in Table 3.9, 1,580 chemical species were reported with information on 42 new and different chemical species. 21 ------- TABLE 3.1. SOURCE CATEGORY - 1979 ENTRIES FREQUENCY 32 14 VALUE, EXTCOMB BOILER INDUSTRIAL BOILER 46 TOTAL OCCURRENCES TABLE 3.2. TYPE OF OPERATION - 1979 ENTRIES FREQUENCY 2 20 7 10 1 6 'VALUE COMMERCL-INSTUTNL ELECTRIC GENERATN FOOD/AGRICULTURAL INDUSTRIAL MINERAL PRODUCTS PRIMARY METALS 46 TOTAL OCCURRENCES TABLE 3.3. FEED MATERIAL CLASS - 1979 ENTRIES FREQUENCY 2 1 1 8 1 2 7 3 13 5 1 1 VALUE AL ORE-ELECROREDN ASPHALT ROOFING BARK/OIL BITUMINOUS COAL COKE-MET BYPRODUC COPPER SMELTER GRAIN PROCESSING LIGNITE OTHER/NOT CLASIFD RESIDUAL OIL STEEL PRODUCTION WOOD 45 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 22 ------- TABLE 3.4 OPERATING MODE CLASS - 1979 ENTRIES FREQUENCY VALUE 1 1 1 1 10 7 1 3 3 1 1 5 7 1 1 ELECT ARC W/LANCE HOG FUEL BOILER HORIZSTD SODERBURG KRAFTRECOVERY NA OTHER/NOT CLASIFD OVEN PUSHING SPECIFY IN REMARKS WOOD WASTE BOILER >100MM BTU CYCLONE >100MM BTU >100MM BTU PULVDRY >100MM BTU/HR 10-100 MM PVL WT.TON 10-100MMBTUSPDSTK 44 TOTAL OCCURRENCES TABLE 3.5. CONTROL DEVICE CLASS - 1979 ENTRIES FREQUENCY 27 2 1 1 6 1 VALUE CONVENTIONAL NA NONE NOVEL PILOT SCALE PROTOTYPE 38 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 23 ------- TABLE 3.6. CONTROL DEVICE CATEGORY - 1979 ENTRIES FREQUENCY 2 2 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 3 15 1 1 1 1 1 3 VALUE COMBINATION DOUBLE CHAMBER ESP DRY, COLDSIDE, PARALLEL PLATE FABRIC FILTER HI VOLTAGE HI VOLTAGE ESP HOT HOTSIDE MECHANICAL SHAKE MULTIPLE NA NONE OTHER PLATE PLATE ESP SINGLE VENTURI VARIABLE THROAT 39 TOTAL OCCURRENCES TABLE 3.7. CONTROL DEVICE COMMERCIAL NAME - 1979 ENTRIES FREQUENCY 1 2 1 3 1 2 1 1 1 2 2 13 1 1 VALUE DACRON TM FILTER TUBES DUAL THROAT VENTURI SCRUBBER ELECTRIFIED BED (EFB) ELECTROSTATIC PRECIPITATOR EPA MOBILE ESP ESP MOBILE ESP MOBILE FABRIC FILTER SYSTEM MODEL 6700 TCAS MULTICLONE MULTICLONE 9DG12 NA NONE VENTURI SCRUBBER 33 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 24 ------- TABLE 3.8. MEASUREMENT INSTRUMENT/METHOD NAME 1979 ENTRIES FREQUENCY 42 98 158 127 19 14 151 5 150 44 7 87 6 6 VALUE ANDERSEN MODEL II IMPACTOR ANDERSEN MODEL III IMPACTOR BAUSCH AND LOME MODEL 40-1-OPC BRINK BMS-11 IMPACTOR MRI MODEL 1502 IMPACTOR OTHER OTHER IMPACTOR OTHER - OPC RICH 100 CNC SASS TRAIN - WITH CYCLONES SIERRA C-226 IMPACTOR UW MARK III IMPACTOR WHITBY ELEC. ANALYZER MOD 3030 WIRE SCREEN DIFF BATTERY 914 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 25 ------- TABLE 3.9. CHEMICAL SPECIES - 1979 ENTRIES FREQUENCY 40 17 40 9 21 7 23 9 39 51 41 46 19 11 11 3 3 11 3 11 3 63 11 43 3 8 51 3 12 43 15 8 48 11 18 8 9 CHEMICAL SPECIES ALUMINUM ANTIMONY ARSENIC BERYLLIUM BARIUM BORON BROMINE CADMIUM CALCIUM CHROMIUM COBALT COPPER CHLORINE CERIUM CESIUM DYPROSIUM ERBIUM EUROPIUM GADOLINIUM GALLIUM GERMANIUM IRON HAFNIUM LEAD HOLMIUM INDIUM MANGANESE IRIDIUM MOLYBDENUM NICKEL LITHIUM LUTETIUM MAGNESIUM IODINE MERCURY GOLD NEODYMIUM FREQUENCY 11 3 3 3 16 5 22 3 3 3 3 56 11 8 26 51 8 3 8 3 11 3 7 3 9 9 34 11 3 23 10 5 2 12 2 25 CHEMICAL SPECIES LANTHANUM NIOBIUM OSMIUM PALLADIUM PHOSPHORUS PLATINUM METAL SELENIUM PRASEODYMIUM RHENIUM RHODIUM TIN TITANIUM SAMARIUM SCANDIUM SILICON ZINC TANTALUM TELLURIUM TERBIUM THALLIUM THORIUM . THULIUM RUBIDIUM RUTHENIUM TUNGSTEN URANIUM POTASSIUM YTTERSBIUM YTTRIUM SODIUM ZIRCONIUM FLUORIDE ION SULFATE SULFITE STRONTIUM VANADIUM 1,580 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 26 ------- SECTION 4.0 FPEIS DATA BASE SUMMARY The FPEIS has evolved into the most comprehenisve and authoritative source of stationary source particle sizing emissions data available today. As of December 31, 1979, the FPEIS data base contained information on 165 test activities (test series) and 2,821 individual test measurements (test runs). The amount of information the FPEIS now includes on sources, control devices, sampling and analysis methods, and particulate and chemical analyses is of sufficient variety for the FPEIS data base to be a valuable resource for fine particle technology research. As an example of the variety in the FPEIS, there are 6 specific Source Categories and 17 Types of Operation, as listed in Tables 4.1 and 4.2, respectively. Thirty-six different Feed Material Classes and 46 Operating Mode Classes are reported in FPEIS. These are given in Table 4.3 and 4.4, respectively. Information on many control devices is stored in the FPEIS; for instance, data on several Control Device Clases, 47 Control Device Categories, and 45 Control Device Commercial Names, as shown in Tables 4.5, 4.6, and 4.7, respectively. In addition, 26 different Measurement/Methods are included in the FPEIS as shown in Table 4.8. Information on 77 different chemical species can be found in the FPEIS, and they are listed in Table 4.9. A summary of the contents of the FPEIS data base as of December 31, 1979, is provided in the Appendix. As new test data are added to the FPEIS, the data base will be updated. The prime objective of the FPEIS from its inception was to provide a cur- rent and accurate emissions data base. Since it is now a requirement for EPA IERL/ RTF contractors performing fine particle emissions testing to submit their data findings to the FPEIS, the growth of the FPEIS is expected to continue at a steady rate. 27 ------- TABLE 4.1. SUMMARY OF SOURCE CATEGORY FREQUENCY 99 61 I 1 2 2 VALUE EXTCOMB BOILER INDUSTRIAL PROCESS INTERNLCOMBUSTION LABORATORY OTHER SOLID WASTE 175 TOTAL OCCURRENCES TABLE 4.2. SUMMARY OF TYPE OF OPERATION FREQUENCY 3 3 1 62 8 2 34 1 14 1 22 1 7 6 VALUE CHEMICAL MFC COMMERCL-INSTUTNL DEVICE EVALUATION ELECTRIC GENERATN FOOD/AGRICULTURAL GOVERNMENT INDUSTRIAL LAB ANALYSIS MINERAL PRODUCTS PETROLEUM INDRY PRIMARY METALS PROTOTYPE TEST SECONDARY METALS WOOD PRODUCTS 165 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 28 ------- TABLE 4.3. SUMMARY OF FEED MATERIAL CLASS FREQUENCYVALUE 3 AL ORE-ELECROREDN 1 ANTHRACITE COAL 1 ASPHALT BATCHING 2 ASPHALT ROOFING 1 BARK/OIL 19 BITUMINOUS COAL 1 CEMENT MFC DRY 1 CEMENT MFC WET 1 CERAMIC/CLAY MFC 1 COAL 1 COKE 2 COKE-MET BYPRODUC 6 COPPER SMELTER 1 COTTON GINNING 1 DIESEL FUEL 1 DISTILLATE OIL 1 FERTILIZER-UREA 7 GRAIN PROCESSING 4 GRAY IRON 1 INCINERATOR 2 LEAD SMELTERS 3 LIGNITE COAL 1 MINERAL WOOL 37 OTHER/NOT CLASIFD 1 PHOS-ACID THERMAL 1 POTASSIUM CHLORID 1 PROCESS HEATER 1 PULP/PAPER MILL 16 RESIDUAL OIL 2 SALT MINING 6 SOLID WASTE/COAL 2 STEEL FOUNDRY 5 STEEL PRODUCTION 6 SULFATE PULPING 3 WOOD 4 ZINC SMELTING 147 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 29 ------- TABLE 4.4. SUMMARY OF OPERATING MODE CLASS FREQUENCYVALUE 1 BATTERY CONDENSER 1 BLAST FURNACE 1 CALCINATION 2 CONVERTING 5 CUPOLA 2 DRYING 1 DUST FEEDER 1 ELECT ARC W/LANCE 1 ELECTRIC ARC NOLANCE 1 GAS 1 HOG FUEL BOILER 1 HORIZSTD SODERBURG 1 KILNS 3 KILNS-GAS FIRED 1 KRAFTRECOVERY 4 LIME KILNS 19 NA 2 OPENHEARTH OXLANCE 1 OPNHEARTH OXLANCE 2 OTHER/NOT CLASIFD 1 OVEN CHARGING 1 OVEN PUSHING 1 PRILLING TOWER 2 PULVERIZED COAL 1 RECIPROCATING 2 RECVY BOLR/OCEVAP 1 ROASTING 1 ROASTING/REVERBERATI 2 ROTARY DRYER 1 ROTARY SALT DRYER 1 SALT DRYERS/MILLS 1 SELF-BAKING 2 SINTERING 1 SMELTING 9 SPECIFY IN REMARKS 6 STOKER 2 VERT RETORTS 5 WOOD WASTE BOILER 6 >100MM BTU PULVERIZED 1 >100MM BTU CYCLONE 8 >100MM BTU PULVDRY 22 >100MM BTU/HR 1 10-100 MM PVL WT.TON 1 10-100 MM BTU SPDSTK 7 10-100 MM BTU/HR 1 10-100 MM BTU/HR STKR 138 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 30 ------- TABLE 4.5. SUMMARY OF CONTROL DEVICE CLASS FREQUENCYVALUE 106 CONVENTIONAL 1 CYCLONE 4 NA 2 NONE 19 NOVEL 15 PILOT SCALE 6 PROTOTYPE 153 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 31 ------- TABLE 4.6. SUMMARY OF CONTROL DEVICE CATEGORY FREQUENCYVALUE 2 CENTRIFUGAL 1 COLDSIDE 3 COMBINATION 4 CONTINUOUSLY CLEANED REVERSE AIR 2 DOUBLE CHAMBER ESP 1 DRY 1 DRY COLDSIDE HI-VOLTAGE 1 ' DRY HOTSIDE PLATE DOUBLE CHAMBER 1 DRY, COLDSIDE, PARALLEL PLATE 1 'DRY, COLDSIDE, PLATE, DOUBLE CHAMBER 2 DRY, COLDSIDE, PLATE, HI-VOLT, 2 CHAM 1 DRY, COLDSIDE, PLATE, SINGLE CHAMBER 3 ESP 1 ESP-DRY 1 FABRIC FILTER 2 FIBROUS PACKING 4 GAS ATOMIZED SPRAY 2 HI VOLTAGE 2 HI VOLTAGE ESP 1 HOT 2 HOTSIDE 1 HOTSIDE, DRY, PLATE 1 IMPINGEMENT 1 IMPINGMENT PLATE 1 INTERMITTENTLY CLEANED 1 MECHANICAL COLLECTOR 4 MECHANICAL SHAKE 3 MOVING BED 8 MULTIPLE 3 MULTIPLE CYCLONE 1 MULTI-VENTURI FLEXITRAY 17 NA 2 NONE 12 OTHER 1 PIPE 14 PLATE 1 PLATE ESP 4 PREFORMED SPRAY 1 PREFORMED SPRAY WET SCRUBBER 8 REVERSE AIR 2 SINGLE 1 VENTURI 1 VENTURI SCRUBBER 5 VENTURI VARIABLE THROAT 3 WET 1 WET HOTSIDE 2 WET HOTSIDE LOW VOLTAGE 137 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 32 ------- TABLE 4.7. SUMMARY OF CONTROL DEVICE COMMERCIAL NAME FREQUENCYVALUE 1 AERONETICS TWO-PHASE JET SCRUB 2 AFTERBURNER 7 BAGHOUSE 5 BAGHOUSE (PILOT UNIT) 1 BRAXTON SONIC AGCLOMERATOR 1 CENTRIFIELD SCRUBBER 1 CLNB HI EFFCY AIR FLTR (CHEAF) 5 CONFIDENTIAL 2 COTRELL PRECIPITATOR TYPE RSP 2 CYCLONE 1 DACRON TM FILTER TUBES 2 DUAL THROAT VENTURI SCRUBBER 1 DUST COLLECTOR 1 DYNACTOR SCRUBBER 1 ELECTRIFIED BED (EFB) 7 ELECTROSTATIC PRECIPITATOR 1 EPA MOBILE ESP 21 ESP 1 GRAVEL BED FILTER 1 IMPINJET WET SCRUBBER 1 KINPACTOR 10X56 VNTURI SCRUBBR 1 KOCH FLEXITRAY 1 LONE-STAR STEEL STEAM-HYDRO 1 MGOX SCRUBBER 10 MOBILE BAGHOUSE 1 MOBILE ESP 1 MOBILE FABRIC FILTER SYSTEM 1 MODEL 6700 TCAS 5 MULTICLONE 2 MULTICLONE 9DG12 1 MULTIVANESCRUBBER 23 NA 2 NONE 1 PENTAPURE SCRUBBER 1 SECONDARY COLD CYCLONE 1 SPRAY TOWER 1 TCA 3 THER-0-FLEX FILTERS 1 TURBULENT CONTACT ABSORBER, TCA 1 TURBULENT CONTACT ABSORBER 1 VENTURI 4 VENTURI SCRUBBER 2 VENTURI-ROD SCRUBBER 2 WET SCRUBBER 1 WETTED FIBER SCRUBBER 143TOTAL OCCURRENCES 33 ------- TABLE 4.8. SUMMARY OF MEASUREMENT/INSTRUMENT NAME FREQUENCY 192 50 678 35 166 20 448 43 170 21 4 18 2 111 58 208 18 53 190 1 4 3 7 280 12 29 VALUE ' ANDERSEN IMP ACTOR ANDERSEN MODEL II IMPACTOR ANDERSEN MODEL III IMPACTOR ANDERSEN MODEL IV IMPACTOR BAUSCH AND LOME MODEL 40-1-OPC BRINK BMS-III IMPACTOR BRINK BMS-11 IMPACTOR BRINK BMS-11 MODIFIED BRINK IMPACTOR BRINK MODEL B IMPACTOR CLIMET MODEL-OPC CNC/DIFF BATTERY ELECTRICAL ANALYZER TS M-3030 MRI MODEL 1502 IMPACTOR OTHER OTHER IMPACTOR OTHER-CNC OTHER-OPC RICH 100-CNC ROYCO MODEL OPC ROYCO MODEL-OPC-225 SASS TRAIN SIERRA C-226 IMPACTOR UW MARK III IMPACTOR WHITBY ELECTRICAL ANALYZER 3030 WIRE SCREEN DIFF BATTERY 2,821 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 34 ------- TABLE 4.9. SUMMARY OF CHEMICAL SPECIES FREQUENCY 8 51 28 54 18 33 7 23 46 65 76 62 66 19 14 11 11 3 3 11 3 11 3 98 11 81 3 8 66 3 12 70 22 8 65 11 28 2 CHEMICAL SPECIES FREQUENCY POLYNUCLEAR HYDROCARBONS 8 ALUMINUM ANTIMONY ARSENIC BERYLLIUM BARIUM BORON BROMINE CADMIUM CALCIUM CHROMIUM COBALT COPPER CHLORINE CARBON CERIUM CESIUM DYPROSIUM ERBIUM EUROPIUM GADOLINIUM GALLIUM GERMANIUM IRON HAFNIUM LEAD HOLMIUM INDIUM MANGANESE IRIDIUM MOLYBDENUM NICKEL LITHIUM LUTETIUM MANGNESIUM IODINE MERCURY STRONTIUM 11 11 3 3 3 27 5 33 3 3 3 12 78 11 8 37 83 8 12 8 5 11 3 7 3 9 9 45 11 3 34 10 19 16 12 18 22 25 CHEMICAL SPECIES LANTHANUM NEODYMIUM LANTHANUM NIOBIUM OSMIUM PALLADIUM PHOSPHORUS PLATINUM METAL SELENIUM PRASEODYMIUM RHENIUM RHODIUM TIN TITANIUM SAMARIUM SCANDIUM SILICON ZINC TANTALUM TELLURIUM TERBIUM THALLIUM THORIUM THULIUM RUBIDIUM RUTHENIUM TUNGSTEN URANIUM POTASSIUM YTTERBIUM YTTRIUM SODIUM ZIRCONIUM FLUORIDE ION CHLORIDE PERCHLORATE SULFATE SULFITE VANADIUM 1,834 TOTAL OCCURRENCES 35 ------- SECTION 5.0 PLANS FOR 1980 5.1 DATA ACQUISITION It is expected that the FPEIS will maintain a steady growth record during 1980 in terms of the number of sites tested and the number of samples taken per site. Since June 1978, all new IERL/RTP projects which involve particle sampling have been required to encode and enter the results from those tests into the FPEIS data base. As these projects become active, data from them will be entered routinely into the data base. Additionally, in 1980 valuable data from the ongoing IERL/RTP Environmental Assessment sampling programs will be received for entry into the FPEIS. Data acquisition is not expected to be limited to IERL/RTP testing pro- grams. In support of an inhalable particulate (IP) standard development, the EPA's Office of Research and Development (OR&D) has undertaken a program to provide emission factors for inhalable particles. Revisions to the particulate standard reflect the need for new particle size data which will be provided to FPEIS from OR&D's IP sampling programs. It is expected that FPEIS will be utilized to aid OR&D personnel in setting priorities for IP sampling programs. In addition to IP data, source testing data from IERL/ Cincinnati will be submitted to the FPEIS. Some carryover work from 1979 will provide a substantial quantity of fine particle sizing data collected by the State of California Air Resources Board. Data will be sought from environmental agencies in many other states. Since the FPEIS has been restructured and reorganized, radionuclide and bioassay results are expected to be reported. The EPA's Office of Radiation Programs will provide for the FPEIS airborne radon and radioactive particulate emissions source testing data. The general purpose of the field test program is to gather background information pertaining to the quantities of naturally occurring radionuclides discharged to the environment from various mining operations. Plans to acquire these data in 1980 are being developed. 5.2 DATA BASE MODIFICATIONS With the development and implementation of the EADS during 1979, the FPEIS underwent major revisions to render the fine particle data system 36 ------- compatible with the other waste stream data systems. Since the FPEIS has been recently revised, most of the data base modifications will be minor and involve the addition of new data elements for which no data have been reported to date. A new data grouping is expected to be added detailing process stream operating conditions. 5.2.1 Process Stream Operating Characteristics This data grouping will contain additional parameters relating to source process conditions, including the source operating mode and rate, as well as identification of the operating parameters and values. Typical process oper- ating characteristics such as flow rate, temperature, pressure, etc., will be provided. These data will enable users to evaluate any effect process oper- ating conditions may have on the fine particle emissions generated by the source. 5.3 FPEIS DATA RETROFIT The task is to convert the existing data found in the old FPEIS format to the new EADS/FPEIS data organization. EADS software will be developed for the data conversion. There will be several steps required to complete this retrofit. Initially, the data elements compatible with the new format must be identified and entered directly. Then, the incompatible data must be manually input into the new format. In most cases, the incompatible data cannot be directly submitted to the EADS/FPEIS format because of data input format differences. The last step in the data conversion will be to complete null data elements, most of which occur because certain data were not previously reported in FPEIS that are now included in the EADS/FPEIS. Most of these null data items are included in the old FPEIS but are now presented in much more detail in the EADS/FPEIS. The FPEIS data retrofit procedure will probably begin with the most recent data acquisitions entered into the FPEIS and work backwards toward the early data. The lastest sets of data are expected to be determined with the more recent sampling and anlaysis state-of-the-art procedures and protocols. The prospect of procuring null data is anticipated to be greater with the later test series. 5.4 TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER As the FPEIS grows in scope and use, the need to maintain a well-informed user community grows as well. The major revision of the FPEIS documentation (EADS/FPEIS User Guide, EADS Terminology Reference Manual, and EADS Systems Overview Manual) is scheduled for completion for the spring of 1980. Holders 37 ------- of registered documentation will receive documentation changes and data updates automatically. Other users or interested parties will be notified by way of a quarterly update publication. The first quarterly update issue has been scheduled for late summer or early fall of 1980. Each issue xiill describe changes or enhancements to the FPEIS since the previous one. Also, new data additions will be described and any new publications will be announced. It is hoped that these quarterly up- dates will provide a forum for comments and suggestions by the user community, as well as a means of informing the users of new developments. Some special reports, brochures, etc., will be prepared as needed. A new FPEIS brochure will be prepared in the spring of 1980. As noted previously, the brochure has been a very effective means of introducing the FPEIS to the public. 5.5 NEW USER SOFTWARE A cascade impactor data reduction system (CIDRS), originally developed by Southern Research Institute (12), has been adapted to perform particle size distribution calculations with data retrieved from the FPEIS data base. The CIDRS software, as shown in Figure 5.1, will be implemented by the summer of 1980. The overall system incorporates five programs: MPPROG, SPLIN1, STATIS, PENTRA, and GRAPH. CIDRS currently is designed to work only with cascade im- pactor data; however, it will be modified to include data from cyclones (SASS train). Raw data on sampling conditions and impactor stage weights are entered into MPPROG to calculate the particle size distribution using the D50 analysis method. Those calculations are then stored in the FPEIS data base, as shown in Figure 5.1. Details on the data requirements can be found in the CIDRS manual by Southern Research Institute (13). SPLIN1 is a curve fitting program used for plotting cumulative mass dis- tributions. A special subroutine has been developed and incorporated into CIDRS that allows extrapolation of particle concentrations and sizes through the inhalable size range. STATIS average data from multiple impactor runs under common conditions and performs statistical computations. PENTRA cal- culates the control device fractional efficiency curve by selecting a pair (i.e., inlet and outlet) of individual impactor runs. The GRAPH program produces cumulative distribution graphs. 38 ------- EADS/FPEIS Database r Cards Data Reduction Program CIDRS Curve Fit Program Statistical Analysis Control System Efficiency Graphical Program Figure 5.1. CIDRS software. ------- REFERENCES 1. Shannon, L. J., P. G. Gorman, and M. Reichel. Particulate Pollutant System Study, Volume II: Fine Particle Emissions. Midwest Research Institute, EPA No. APTD-0744, NTIS No. PB 203-521, August 1971. 2. Guiding for Compiling a Comprehensive Emission Inventory. EPA No. APTD-1135, NTIS No. PB 212-231, March 1973. 3. SOTDAT Final Report. EPA-450/3-75-070, NTIS No. PB 245-052, July 1975. 4. Schrag, M. P., Editor. Fine Particle Emissions Information System User Guide. Midwest Research Institute, EPA-600/8-78-006, NTIS No. PB 285-877, June 1978. 5. Schrag, M. P., Editor. Fine Particle Emissions Information System Reference Manual. Midwest Research Institute, EPA-600/8-78-007, NTIS No.. PB 286-004, June 1978. 6. Reider, J. P., Editor. Environmental Assessment Data System User Guide: Fine Particle Emissions Information System. Midwest Research Institute, EPA-600/8-80-005, January 1980. 7. Larkin, R., Editor, Environmental Assessment Data System: System Overview Manual. EPA-600/8-80-011, February 1980. 8. Larkin, R. Editor, Environmental Assessment Data System: Terminology Reference Manual. EPA-600/8-80-011, February 1980. 9. Larkin, R., Editor. Environmental Assessment Data System User Guide: Gaseous Emissions Data System. EPA-600/8-80-006, January 1980. 10. Larkin, R., Editor. Environmental Assessment Data System User Guide: Liquid Effluents Data System. EPA-600/8-80-008, January 1980. 11. Larkin, R., Editor. Environmental Assessment Data System User Guide: Solid Discharge Data System. EPA-600/8-80-009, January 1980. 40 ------- 12. Johnson, J., et al. Extending Precision in a Computer-Based Cascade Impactor Data Reduction System in; W. B. Smith, Editor, Proceedings: Second Symposium on Advances in Particle Sampling and Measurement, Daytona Beach, Florida, October 1979. EPA-600/9-80-004, January 1980. 13. Johnson, J., et al. A Computer-Based Cascade Impactor Data Reduction System. EPA-600/7-78-042, March 1978. 41 ------- APPENDIX FPEIS DATA BASE SUMMARY (as of December 31, 1979) A-1 ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emtaqlons Source Applied Control Equipment Total Ho. of Buns T to Harris, D. B., and D. C. Drehmel, "Fractional Efficiency of Metal Fume Control as Determined by Brink Impactor," EPA/CSL (1973) Harris, D. B., and D. C. Drehmel, "Fractional Efficiency of Metal Fume Control as Determined by Brink Impactor," EPA/CSL (1973) Harris, D. B., and D. C. Drehmel, "Fractional Efficiency of Metal Fume Control as Determined by Brink Impactor," EPA/CSL (1973) Harris, D. B., and D. C. Drehmel, "Fractional Efficiency of Metal Fume Control as Determined by Brink Inpactor," EPA/CSL (1973) Harris, D. B., and D. C. Drehmel, "Fractional Efficiency of Metal Fume Control as Determined by Brink Irapsctor," EPA/CSL (1973) Statnlck, R. M., "Measurement of S02, Partlculate. and Trace Elements In a Copper Smelter Converter and Roaster/ Reverberatory Gas Streams," EPA/CSL (1974) Statnlck, R. H., "Measurement of SO], Partlculate, and Trace Elements In a Copper Smelter Converter and Roaster/ Reverberatory Gas Streams," EPA/CSL (1974) Brink Model B Impactor Brink Model B Impactor Brink Model B Impactor Brink Model B Impactor Brink Model B Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Brink Model B Impactor Zn Roaster Cu Converter Zn Sintering Pb Sintering Pb Blast Furnace Cu Roaster and Re- verberatory Furnace Cu Converter Wet ESP (Tube-and-Wlre) Wet ESP (Tube-and-Wlre) Dry ESP (Rod-and-wlre) Baghouae (Orion) Mechanical Shake Baghouse (Wool felt) Mechanical Shake Dry ESP (pipe) and Parallel ESP (plate) Plate Type ESP ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emissions Source Applied Total Control Equipment No. of Runs 8 McCain, J. D., and W. B. Smith, "Lone Star Steel Steam-Hydro Air Cleaning System Evnlua- tlon," EPA-650/2-74-028 (1974) 9 Cooper, D. W., and D. P. Andersen, "Dynactor Scrubber Evaluation," CCA Corporation (1974) 10 Harris, D. B., "Teats Performed at Celotex Corporation, Coldsboro, North Carolina" 11 Harris, D. B., and J. A. Turner, "Partlculate and 502/803 Mea- surement Around an Anthracite Steam Generator Baghouse," EPA/CSL (1973) 12 McKenna, J. D., "Applying Fabric Filtration to Coal-Fired Indus- trial Boilers: A Preliminary Pilot Scale Investigation." Envlro-Systems and Research, Inc. (1974) 13 Cowherd, C., et al.f "Hazardous Emission Characterization of Utility Boilers," EPA-650/2- 75-066 (1975) 14 EPA Contract 68-02-2144, Test Location No. 19 Andersen Impactor Brink BMS-Il Impactor CNC/Dlffuslon Battery Optical Particle Counter Andersen Model III Impactor UW Mark III Impactor Brink BMS-II Impactor Andersen Impactor Brink BMS-II Impactor SASS Traln-Ulth Cyclones Open Hearth Furnace Test Aerosol from Dust Feeder Asphalt Roofing Lone Star Steel Steam- Hydro Scrubber (Novel Device) Dynactor Scrubber (Novel Device) Afterburner 38 50 Pulverized Coal-Fired Baghouse (Glass fiber) Utility Boiler Reverse Air Stoker-Fired Industrial Baghouse (Pilot-scale) Boiler Reverse Air Pulverized Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Residual Oil-Fired Industrial Boiler Conventional Cyclone None 15 Statnlck, R. M.. and D. C. Brink Impactor Drehmel, "Fine Partlculate Control Using S02 Scrubbers," EPA (1974) 16 Statnlck, R. H., and D. C. Brink Impactor Drehmel, "Fine Partlculate Control Using SOo Scrubbers," EPA (1974) Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Coal-Fired Utility Boiler TCA Scrubber Venturl scrubber 14 ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emissions Source Applied Total Control EquipmentNo. of Runa > -P- 17 Statnlck, R. H., and D. C. Drehmel, "Fine Particulote Control Using S02 Scrubbers," EPA (1975) 18 Rlggenbach, J. D., E. D. Johnson and H. K. Hamlln, "Measurement of Partlculate Grain Loadings, Particle Size Distribution, and Sulfur Gas Concentrations at Hoerner Waldorf's Pulp and Papermlll No. 3 Recovery Sys- tem," Vols. I, II, and III, Environmental Science and Engineering, Inc. (1973) 19 Shannon, L. J. et al., "St. Louis/ Union Electric Refuse Firing Demonstration Air Pollution Test Report" (1974) 20 McCain, J. D., "Evaluation of Aronetlcs Two-Phase Jet Scrub- ber," EPA-650/2-74-129 (1974) 21 Bosch, J. C., M. J. Pllat, and B. F. Hrutflord, "Size Distri- bution of Aerosols From a Kraft Mill Recovery Furnace," Tappl, 54(ll):187l (1971) Andersen Model III Impactor Brink Impactor Brink Impactor Andersen Impactor Brink Impactor Brink and Andersen Impactora CNC/Diffuslon Battery Optical Particle Counter UW Mark III Impactor Residual Oll-Flred Boiler Pulp and Papermlll Recovery Boiler Venturl MgO Scrubber ESP 39 Solid Waste/Coal- ESP (plate) Fired Utility Boiler Ferro-Alloy Submerged Aronetlcs Two-Phase Arc Furnace jet Scrubber (Novel Device) 26 41 Kraft Mill Recovery Furnace ESP (plate) 22 McCarry, F. J., and C. J. Gregory, "A Comparison of the Size Distribution of Partlcu- lates Emitted from Air, Me- chanical, and Steam Atomized Oll-Flred Burners," JAPCA. 22(8):636 (1972) Andersen Impactor Residual Oll-Flred Utility Boiler ESP (plate) ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emissions Source Applied Control Equipment Total No. of Runs 23 24 25 26 27 28 Andersen Impactor McGarry, F. J.. and C. J. Gregory "A Comparison of the size Dis- tribution of Partlculates Emitted from Air, Mechanical, and Steam Atomized Oll-Fired Burners," JAPCA. 22(8):636 (1972) McGarry, F. J., and C. J. Gregory, Andersen Impactor "A Comparison of the Size Dis- tribution of parttculates Emitted from Air, Mechanical, and Steam Atomized Oll-Fired Burners," JAPCA . _ 22(8):636 (1972) Lee, R. E., Jr., H. L. Crist, A. E. Rlley, and K. E. MacLeod, "Concentration and Size of Trace Metal Emissions from a Power Plant, a Steel Plant, and a Cot- ton Gin," Env. Scl. and Tech., 9(7):643 (1975) Lee, R. E., Jr., H. L. Crist, A. E. Rtley, and K. E. MacLeod, "Concentration and Size of Trace Metal Emissions from a Pover Plant, a Steel Plant, and a Cot- ton Gin," Env. Set, and Tech., 9(7):643 (1975) Lee, R. E., Jr., H. L. Crist, A. E. Rlley, and K. E. MacLeod, "Concentration and size of Trace Metal Emissions from a Power Plant, a Steel Plant, and a Cot- ton Gin," Env. Scl. and Tech.. 9(7):643 (1975) "St. Louis/Union Electric Refuse Fuel Project," MR1 Project No. 382l-C(4). January 1975 UW Mark III Impactor UW Kirk III Impactor UVI Mark III Impactor Andersen Model til Impactor Brink Impactor CNC/Dlffusion Battery Optical Particle Counter Residual Oll-Fired Utility Boiler Residual Oll-Fired Utility Boiler Utility Boiler ESP (plate) ESP (plate) ESP (plate) Electric Arc Furnace Baghouse (Mechanical Shake) Cotton Gin Wet Scrubber Solid Waste/Coal- Fired Utility Boiler ESP (plate) 67 ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emissions Source Applied Total Control Equipment No. of Runs 29 "St. Louis/Union Electric Refuse Fuel Project," MRI Project No. 4033-C, Monthly Report. No. 1 (1975) 30 "Test and Evaluation Program for St. Louis/Union Electric Refuse Fuel Project," MRI Project No. 4033-C, Monthly Report No. 4 (1975) 31 "Test and Evaluation Program for St. Louis/Union Electric Refuse Fuel Project," MRI Project No. 4033-C, Monthly Report No. 11 (1976) 32 Toca, F. M., "Lead and Cadmium Distribution In the Partlculate Effluent from a Coal-Fired Boiler," Ph.D. Thesis, Uni- versity of Iowa, Ames, Iowa, (1972) 33 Baladl, E., "Particle Size Dis- tribution Testa for Beker In- dustries Corporation," MRI Project No. 5-1379-C (1975) 34 Cooch, J. P.. and J. D. McCain, "Partlculate Collection Effici- ency Measurements on a Wet Electrostatic Preclpltator," EPA-650/2-75-033 (1975) 35 Bradway, R. M., and R. V. Cass "Fractional Efficiency of a Utility Boiler Boghouse," EPA- 600/2-75-013-1) (1975) 36 McKenna, J. D., J. C. Mylock, and W. 0. Llpscomb, "Applying Fab- ric Filtration to Coal-Fired Industrial Boilers," EPA-650/2- 74-058-a (1975) Andersen Impnctor Brink Impactor Andersen Impactor Brink Impactor CNC/Dlffusion Battery Optical Particle Counter Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-II Impactor Andersen Impactor Brink Model B Impactor Andersen Impactor CNC/Dlffualon Battery Optical Particle Counter Anderaen Model III Impactor Andersen Impactor Solid Waste/Coal-Fired ESP (plate) Utility Boiler Solid Waste/Coal-Fired ESP (plate) Utility Boiler Solid Waste/Coal-Flred ESP (plate) Utility Boiler 12 43 19 Traveling-Grate Stoker Boiler Cyclone Phosphate Rock Calclner Venturl Scrubber Aluminum Reduction Cells Coal-Fired Boiler Coal-Fired stoker Boiler wet ESP (plate) Preceded by Wet Scrubbers Baghouse (Pilot-scale) Reverse Air 17 86 Baghouse (Pilot-scale) 28 Reverse Air ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emlsslons Source Applied Total Control Equipment No. of Runs 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 McKenna, J. D., J. C. Mylock, and W. 0. Llpscomb, "Applying Fab- ric Filtration to Cnnl-Flred Industrial Boilers," EPA-650/2- 74-058-a (1975) McKenna, J. D., J. C. Mylock, and W. 0. Llpscomh, "Applying Fab- ric Filtration to Coal-Fired Industrial Boilers," EPA-650/2- 74-058-n (1975) McKenna, J. D., J. C. Mylock, and W. 0. Llpscomb, "Applying Fab- ric Filtration to Coal-Fired Industrial Boilers," EPA-650/2- 74-058-a (1975) McKenna, J. D., J. C. Mylock, and W. 0. Llpscomb, "Applying Fab- ric Filtration to Conl-Flred Industrial Boilers," EPA-650/2- 74-058-a (1975) McCain, J. D., "Evaluation of Centrlfleld Scrubber," EPA-650/ 2-74-129-a (1975) Cooper, D. W., "Pentapure Implnger Evaluation," EPA-650/2-75-024-3 (1975) Andersen Irapactor Andersen Irapactor Andersen Impactor Andersen Irapactor Andersen Impactor CMC/Diffusion Battery Whltby Electrical Analyzer, Model 3030 Brink Impactor Andersen Impactor Yost, K. J., ct nl., "The Environ- Andersen Impactor mental Flow of Cadmium and Other Trace Metals," Progress Report NSF (RANN) Grant CI-35106, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana (1973) Yost, K. J.. et al., "The Environ- Andersen Impnctor mentnl Flov of Cadmium and other Trace Metals," Progress Report NSF (RANN) Grant GI-35106, Purdue University, West Lafoyette, Indiana (1974) Coal-Fired Stoker Boiler Coal-Fired Stoker Boiler Coal-Fired Stoker Boiler Coal-Fired Stoker Boiler Asphalt Dryer Gray Iron Cupola Zinc Coke plant Zinc Vertical Retort Baghouse (Pilot-scale) Reverse Air Baghouse (Pilot-scale) Reverse Air Baghouse (Pilot-scale) 11 Reverse Air Baghouse (Pilot-scale) Reverse Air 1. Coarse Cyclone 31 2. Secondary Collector 3. Scrubber (Novel Device) Pentapure Implnger (Novel Device) None 12 None ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Applied Total Emissions Source Control Equipment No. of Runs 45 Yost, K. J. et al., "the Environ- mental Flow of Cadmium and Other Trace Metals," Progress Report NSF (RAKN) Grant GI-35106, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana (1974) Andersen Impactor Steel Mill Open Hearth ESP Furnace 46 Yost, K. J. et al., "The Environ- mental Flow of Cadmium and Other Trace Metals," Progress Report NSF (RANN) Grant GI-35106, Purdue University, Heat Lafayette, Indiana (1973) Andersen Impactor Municipal Incinerator Wet Scrubber 47 Brown, A., Jr. et al., ERDA Con- tract No. EX-7-6-C-01-2267 Andersen Model III Impactor Industrial Boiler None co 48 Calvert, S., N. J. Jhaverl, and s. Yung, "Fine Particle Scrubber Performance Testa," EPA-650/2- 74-093 (1974) 49 Calvert, S., N. J. Jhaverl, and S. Yung,. "Fine Particle Scrubber Performance Tests," EPA-650/2- 74-093 (1974) UV Mark II Impactor Andersen Impactor Andersen Impactor Brink Impactor UW Mark III Impactor Urea Prilling Tower None Potash Dryer Wet Scrubber 12 17 50 Calvert, S., N. J. Jhaverl, and S. Yung, "Fine Particle Scrub- ber Performance Tests," EPA- 650/2-74-093 (1974) UW Mark III Impactor Coal-Fired Utility Boiler ESP and TCA Scrubber 51 Calvert, S.. N. J. Jhaverl, and S. Yung, "Fine Particle Scrub- ber Performance Tests," EPA- 650/2-74-093 (1974) Brink Impactor UW Mark III Impactor Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Venturl Scrubber 52 Calvert, S., N. J. Jhaverl; and S. Yung, "Fine Particle Scrub- ber Performance Testa," EPA- 650/2-74-093 (1974) UW Mark III Impactor Salt Dryer Wetted Fiber Scrubber 16 53 Calvert, S., N. J. Jhaverl, and S. Yung, "Fine Particle Scrub- ber Performance Tests," EPA- 650/2-74-093 (1974) UW Mark III Impactor Salt Dryer Impingement Plate Scrubber 12 ------- FPF.IS Teat Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emission Source Applied Total Control Equipment No. of Runs 54 Calvert, S., N. J. Jhaverl, and S. Yung, "Fine Particle Scrub- ber Performance Tests," EPA- 650/2-74-093 (1974) 55 Calvert, S., ct al . , EPA-600/2- 7f,-282 (1976) UW Mark III Impactor UW Mark III Impactor Cray Iron Cupola Gray Iron Cupola Venturl Rod Scrubber Venturl Rod Scrubber 18 35 56 EPA Contract No. 68-02-1814, Bechtel Corporation, San Francisco, California MRI Model 1502 Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Pulverized Coal-Fired wet Scrubbers (Prototype) 101 Utility Boiler 57 EPA Contract No. 68-02-1814, Bechtel Corporation, San Francisco, California MRI Model 1502 Impactor Brink BMS-ll Impactor Pulverized Coal-Fired TCA Scrubber (Prototype) Utility Boiler 75 58 Hunter, S. C., ct al., EPA Contract No. 68-02-1074 Brink BMS-ll Impactor Coal-Fired Industrial Boiler 59 Hunter, S. C., et al., EPA Contract No. 68-02-1074 Brink BMS-ll Inpactor Residual Oil-Flred Industrial Boiler None Hunter, S. C., et al., EPA Contract No. 68-02-1074 Brink BMS-ll Impactor Residual Oil -Fired Industrial Boiler 61 Hunter, S. C., et al., EPA Contract No. 68-02-1074 Brink BMS-ll Impactor Residual Oll-Flred Industrial Boiler None 62 Hunter, S. C., Pt al., EPA Contract No. 68-02-1074 Brink BMS-ll Impactor Residual 011-Fired Industrial Boiler 63 Hunter. S. C., ct al., F.PA Contract No. 68-02-1074 Brink BMS-ll Irapactor Coal-Fired Industrial Boiler 64 Hunter, S. C., et al., EPA Contract No. 68-02-1074 Brink BMS-ll Impactor Coal-Fired Industrial Boiler None 65 Hunter, S. C., pt al., EPA Contract No. 68-02-1074 Brink BHS-11 Impactor Coal-Fired Industrial Boiler ESP 66 Hunter, S. C., ft al., EPA Contract No. 68-02-1074 Brink BMS-ll Impactor Distillate Oll-Flred Industrial Boiler ESP 67 Hunter, S. C., pt al., EPA Contract No. 68-02-1074 Brink BMS-ll Impactor Residual Oll-Flred Industrial Boiler ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emissions Source Applied Total Control Equipment No. of Runs 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 Ensor, D. S., rt al., F.PA- 600/2-75-074 (1975) Schllesser, S. P., EPA Contract No. 68-02-2646 Stanley, C., North Dakota Trip Report, Inter-Office Memorandum Snyder, .J. W., et al.. EPA 68-02-1816, Report 5 (1977) Cavanagh, L. A., et al.. Contract No. J7-2B046 (1978) Bradway, R. M., ct al., EPA-600/2- 76-077A (1976) Other Impactor Wire Screen Dtff Battery Brink BMS-11 Impactor UW Mark III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor UW Mark III Impactor Other Impsctors Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor SASS Train-With Cyclones Andersen Model III Impactor Bradway, R. M. , et al., EPA-600/2 76-077A (1976) Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Utility Boiler Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Residual Oll-Flred Utility Boiler Utility Boiler Bradway, R. M. , et al., EPA-600/2- Andersen Model III Impactor Utility Boiler 76-077A (1976) Andersen Model III Impactor Utility Boiler UW Mark III Impactor Rich 100-CNC Wet Scrubber 34 Mobile High Voltage ESP 79 (Pilot-scale) Mobile High Voltage ESP 30 (Pilot-scale) Mobile Fabric Filter IB (Pilot-scale) None 5 Fabric Filter (Teflon- 38 coated fiberglass) Reverse Air Fabric Filter (Teflon- 34 coated fiberglass) Reverse Air Fabric Filter (Teflon- 81 coated fiberglass) Reverse Air 76 Cass, R. W., and J. E. Langley, EPA-600/7-77-023 (1977) Andersen Model III Impactor Electric Arc Furnace UW Mark III Impactor Bausch and Lomb Model 40-l^OPC Rich 100-CNC Fabric Filter (Dacron) 339 77 Rel, M. T., and D. W. Cooper, EPA-600/2-76-202 (1976) 78 Dennis, R., et al., EPA-650/2- 74-036 (1974) 79 Werner, A. S., ft al., EPA-600/7- 76-017 (1976) Andersen Model III Impactor. Laboratory Analysis Bausch and Lomb Model 40-1-OPC Rich 100-CNC Andersen Model III Impactor Prototype Test UW Hark HI Impactor Residual-Oil Utility Boiler CHEAP Scrubber (Novel 52 Device) Sonic Agglomerator (Novel 32 Device) Cyclone 2 ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emissions Source Applied Total Control Equipment No. of Runs 80 Nichols, G. B., ct al., "Collec- tion Efficiency on Three ESP," EPA-600/2-75-056, October 1975 81 Gooch, J. P., et al., SORl- EAS-76-421, Draft. September 1976 82 Nichols, G. B., ct al., SORI- EAS-76-511 (1976) 83 Gooch, J. P., et al., EPA- 600/2-76-141, May 1976 84 Cooch, J. P., ct al., EPA- 600/2-76-141, May 1976 85 Nichols, G. B., and J. D. McCain, EPA-600/2-75-056 (1975) 86 McCain, J. D., "Evaluation of Rexnorp Gravel Bed Filter," EPA-600/2-76-164 (1976) 87 Harrlsburg Municipal Incinerator EPA 68-02-0284 88 McCain, J. D., SORI-EAS-73-052 February 1973 89 Gooch, J. P., and C. B. Nichols, SORI-EAS-77-098 EPRI-RP413-1 (1977) Andersen Model III Impactor Rotary Kiln In Cement Dry ESP (plate) Brink BMS-11 Impactor Manufacture Royco Model OPC Other-CNC Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Whltby Electrical Analyzer, Model 3030 Brink BMS-11 Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor UW Mark III Impactor Whltby Electrical Analyzer, Model 3030 Brink BMS-11 Impactor UW Mark III Impactor Coal-Fired Boiler Copper Smelter Sulfate Pulping Sulfate Pulping Brink and Andersen tmpactora Unclassified Boiler Dry ESP (plate) Dry ESP (plate) Ill-Voltage ESP (plate) Hi-Voltage ESP (plate) ESP Andersen Model IV Impactor Royco Model OPC Other-CNC Andersen Mark III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Other Solid Waste Incinerator Dry ESP Ceramic/Clay Dryer Cyclone Andersen Model III Impactor Pulverized Coal-Fired Dry ESP (plate) Whltby Electrical Analyzer, utility Boiler Model 3030 Other 22 23 13 12 Clinker Cooler In Gravel Bed Filter (Novel 49 Cement Manufacture Device) 10 34 90 EPA Contract Nn. 68-02-1869 91 EPA Contract No. 68-02-1869 92 Electrified Bed Evaluation, EPA- 600/7-78-178 (197R) UW Mark III Impactor UW Mark III Impactor, Wire Screen Dlff. Battery Mineral Process Gray Iron Cupola Andersen Model III Impactor Asphalt Roofing Venturl Scrubber Venturl Scrubber Electrified Bed (Prototype) 25 53 12 97 Confidential MEI Model 1502 Impactor Bark/Oll-Flred Industrial Boiler Cyclone ------- FPEIS Test Series No. 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 Data Reference EPA Contract 68-02-1816, Monsanto Report, March 1975 EPA Contract 68-02-1816, Monsanto Report, Kirch 1975 EPA Contract 68-02-1816, Monsanto Report, March 1975 EPA Contract 68-02-1816, Monsanto Report, March 1975 EPA Contract 68-02-1816, Monsanto Report, March 1975 EPA Contract 68-02-1816, Monsanto Report, March 1975 EPA Contract 68-02-1816, Monsanto Report. October 1975 EPA Contract 68-02-1816, Monsanto Report, October 1975 EPA Contract 68-02-1816, Monsanto Report, October 1975 EPA Contract 68-02-1816, Monsanto Report, October 1975 Confidential Confidential Confidential Confidential Sampling Equipment Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-11. Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-ll Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Other Impactor Other-OPC Other Impactor Andersen Model II Impactor Other Impactor Other-OPC Emissions Source Pulverized Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Pulverized Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Pulverized Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Pulverized Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Pulverized Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Pulverized Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Sulfate Pulping Kiln Wood Pulping Kiln Wood Pulping Kiln Wood Pulping Kiln Coke-Fired Utility Boiler Unclassified Boiler Metals Process Coal-Fired Stoker Boiler Applied Control Equipment Mobile Fabric Filter (Novel Device) Mobile Fabric Filter (Novel Device) Mobile Fabric Filter (Novel Device) Mobile Fabric Filter (Novel Device) Mobile Fabric Filter (Novel Device) Mobile Fabric Filter (Novel Device) Mobile Fabric Filter (Novel Device) Mobile Fabric Filter (Novel Device) Mobile Fabric Filter (Novel Device) Mobile Fabric Filter (Novel Device) None Cyclone, Fabric Filter Afterburner Cyclone Total No. of Runs 1 4 5 18 24 14 23 22 41 12 8 9 2 20 112 Coal and Refuse Test, SORl- EAS-75-316, June 1975 Andersen Model III Impactor Other Other Impactor Solid Waste/Coal-Fired Utility Boiler ESP 55 113 Confidential Brink BMS-11 Impactor Steel Foundry Mechanical Cyclone ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emlss ions Source Applied Total Control Equipment No. of Runs I H— W 114 McCain, J. D., and W. B. Smith, Final Report, SORI-EAS-74-158 115 McCain, J. I). , et al., SORl-EAS- 74-418, December 20, and SORI- EAS-75-062, February 10 116 Bird, A. N. , SORI-FAS-73-1 24 , June 20. 1973 117 Bird, A. N., SORI-EAS-73-200 118 Nichols, G. B., SORI-EAS-74- 009, 3155-IF, March 12, 1974 119 Nichols, G. B., Company Correspon- dence, A1402-3005-IF, November 13, 1972 120 Nichols, G. B., and J. D. McCain, EPA-600/2-75-056, October 1975 121 Nichols, G. B. , and .1. p. Gooch, A1364-Z975, October 1972 122 Gooch, J. P., and C. II. Marchant, SORI-EAS-77-476, EPRI-RP413-1 (1977) 123 McCain, J.D. SORI-EAS-73-127 , (1973) 124 McCain, J. D. SORI-EAS-73-127, (1973) 125 Gooch, J. P., nnd C. II. Marchant. SORI-EAS-77-476. EPRI-RP413-1 (1977) 126 Cooch, J. P.. and C. II. Marcliant, SORI-EAS-77-476, EPRI-RP413-1 (1977) Andersen Mark III Impactor Utility Boiler Andersen Mark III Impactor Other Impactor Other-OPC Brink BMS-11 Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Cllmct Model-OPC Other-CNC Andersen Model III Impnctor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Mark III Impactor Other Brink BMS-11 Impacror Andersen Model II Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Model II Irapactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Model II Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Andersen Model HI Impnctor Other Impactor Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Steel Foundry Cyclone ESP Unclassified Boiler ESP Unclassified Boiler ESP Unclassified Roller Dry ESP Unclassified Boiler ESP Unclassified Boiler ESP Mineral Process Cyclone Mineral Wool Cupola Cyclone Unclassified Boiler ESP Unclassified Boiler ESP 71 Wet Scrubber (Pilot-scale) 12 Hood Ducts 10 24 10 48 24 64 ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emissions Source Applied Total Control Equipment No. of Runs 127 Dlsmukes, E., SORI-EAS-75-311, EPA-600/2-75-015 (1975) 128 Dlsmukes, E., SORI-EAS-75-311, EPA-600/2-75-015 (1975) 129 Evaluation of ESP During SRC Combustion, EPA-600/7-78-129 (1978) 130 CEA Variable-Throat Venturl Scrubber, EPA-650/7-78-094 (1978) 131 Cooch, J. P., et al., SORl-EAS- 75-622 (1975) 132 Cooch, J. P., and C. II. Marchant, SORI-EAS-77-476, EPRI-RP413 (1977) 133 McCain, J. D., SORI-EAS-76-355 (July 15, 1976) 134 Evaluation of ESP During SRC Combustion, EPA-600/7-78-129 (1978) 137 Bryant, M. A., United McGlll Corp. Report (December 16, 1976) 138 Confidential 139 Nelson. P. A., Dept. of Ecology 160 Nelson, P. A., Dept. of Ecology 141 Nelson, P. A., Report No. 76-14 (1976) 142 EPA Contract No. 68-01-3155 Task No. I (August 1976) Andersen Impactor Other-CNC Andersen Model III Impactor Other-CNC SASS Traln-Hlth Cyclones Other Impactor Brink BHS-ll Impactor UW Mark III Impactor Unclassified Boiler ESP (Prototype) Unclassified Boiler ESP (Prototype) Unclassified Boiler Hi-Voltage ESP Pulverized Coal-Fired Venturl Scrubber Utility Boiler (Novel Device) Andersen Model III Impactor Unclassified Boiler ESP Brink BMS-ll Impactor Andersen Model II Impactor Unclassified Boiler ESP Other Impactor Brink BMS-ll Impactor and Unclassified Boiler Hot side ESP Andersen Model III Impactor SASS Traln-Wlth Cyclones Other Impactor Sierra C-226 Impactor MRI Model 1502 Impactor Other Impactor Other Impactor Other Impactor Other Impactor Andersen Model III Impactor Unclassified Boiler Hi-Voltage ESP Wood Waste Industrial Mobile ESP (plate) Boiler Wood Waste Boiler Cyclone Aluminum Metal Process None Unclassified Boiler None None Wood Waste utility Boiler Metallurgical Coke- Oven Pushing 15 47 16 24 21 37 18 14 15 3 2 2 Cyclone ------- FPEIS Series No. 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 > 150 H-» Ul 152 154 155 156 157 158 159 Data Reference Nelson, P. A., Department of Ecology, Washington Nelson, P. A., Department of Ecology, Washington Nelson, P. A., Department oŁ Ecology, Washington Nelson, P. A., Department of Ecology, Washington Nelson, P. A., Department of Ecology, Washington Nelson, P. A., Department of Ecology, Washington Nelson, P. A., Department of Ecology, Washington Nelson, P. A., Department of Ecology, Washington Nelson, P. A., Department of Ecology, Washington Nelson, P. A., Department of Ecology, Washington Nelson, P. A., Department of Ecology, Washington Nelson, P. A., Department of Ecology, Washington EPA Contract No. 68-02-2144 Location 3 EPA Contract No. 68-02-2144 Location 9 EPA Contract No. 68-02-2144 Sampling Equipment Other Imp.ictor Other Impactor Other Impactor Other Impactor Other Irapactor Other Impactor Other Impactor Other Impactor Other Irapactor Other Impactor Other Impactor Other Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor Brink BMS-11 Impactor SASS Traln-Wlth Cyclones Emissions Source Unclassified Boiler Copper Smelter Grain Processor Grain Processor Copper Smelter Kraft Recovery Boiler Grain Processor Grain Processor Grain Processor Grain Processor Grain Processor AL ORE-ELECROEDN HORIZSTD SODERBURC Gas-Fired Cement Kilns Gas-Fired Cement Kilns Gas-Fired Cement Kilns Applied Control Equipment None ESP Cyclone None Pilot Baghouse None Exhaust Blover Cyclone Cyclone Cyclone Cyclone None Reverse Air Baghouse, Multiclone Wet, Hot side Low- Voltage ESP Wet, Hot side Low- Total No. of Runs 4 4 4 7 3 2 1 2 I 3 1 2 1 2 4 Location 9 Voltage ESI' ------- FPEIS Test Series No. 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 186 187 Data Reference EPA Contract No. 68-02-2144 Location 10-1 EPA Contract No. 68-02-2144 Location 10-2 EPA Contract No. 68-02-2144 Location 12 EPA Contract No. 68-02-2144 Location 13 EPA Contract No. 68-02-2144 Location 14 EPA Contract No. 68-02-2144, Location 15 EACCS (EPA 68-02-2197) EACCS (EPA 68-02-2197) EACCS (EPA 68-02-2197) EPA-600/7-78-164c (August 197R) EPA-600/7-78-164c (August 1978) Contract 68-02-2613, Task No. 8, Drsft Report '•Cavanagh, L. A., et al.. Contract No. J7-28046, January 1978 Cavanagh, L. A., et al., Contract Sampling Equipment Brink BMS-11 Impactor SASS Traln-Wlth Cyclones SASS Train SASS Traln-Wlth Cyclones Brink Model B Impactor SASS Train Andersen Model III Impactor SASS Traln-Wlth Cyclones SASS Traln-Wlth Cyclones SASS Traln-Wlth Cyclones SASS Traln-Wlth Cyclones Other Impactor Other-OPC Other Impactor Other-OPC MRI Impactor Other-OPC SASS Traln-Wlth Cyclones SASS Traln-Wlth Cyclones Emissions Source Wood Waste Industrial Boiler Unclassified Boiler Petroleum Process Heater Wood Waste Industrial Boiler Oxlance In Steel production Internal Combustion with Diesel Fuel Pulverized Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Pulverized Coal-Fired Utility Boiler Stoker-Fired Utility Boiler Pulverized Coal-Fired Industrial Boiler Residual Oll-Flred Industrial Boiler Cyclone-Fired utility Boiler Residual Oll-Flred Utility Boiler Residual Oll-Flred Applied Control Equipment Multlclone, Variable- Throat venturi Scrubber Wet, Rot side ESP None Multlclone Dry, Cold side, High- Voltage ESP None Multlclone Multlclone Multlclone Variable-Throat Venturi Scrubber (Pilot-scale) Dual Throat Venturi Scrubber (Pilot-scale) Wet Scrubber None None Total No. of Runs 1 4 2 3 1 3 I 1 1 2 4 2 4 8 No. J7-28046, January 1978 Utility Boiler ------- FPEIS Test Series No. Data Reference Sampling Equipment Emissions Source Applied Control Equipment Total No. of Runs 188 Cavanagh, L. A. et al.. Contract No. J7-28046, January 1978 189 Confidential SASS Troln-Wlth Cyclones UW Mark III Impactor Other Impactor Residual Oll-Flred Utility Boiler Coal-Fired Utility Boiler ESP (plate) 11 I F—i ~J ------- TECHNICAL REPORT DATA (Please read Instructions on the reverse before completing) 1. REPORT NO. EPA-600/7-80-092 3. RECIPIENT'S ACCESSION NO. 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Fine Particle Emissions Information System: Annual Report (1979) 5. REPORT DATE May 1980 6. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION CODE 7. AUTHOR(S) J.P. Reider and R. F. Hegarty 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NO. 9. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME AND ADDRESS Midwest Research Institute 425 Volker Boulevard Kansas City, Missouri 64110 10. PROGRAM ELEMENT NO. EHE624A 11. CONTRACT/GRANT NO. 68-02-2641 12. SPONSORING AGENCY NAME AND ADDRESS EPA, Office of Research and Development Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory Research Triangle Park, NC 27711 13. TYPE OF REPORT AND PERIOD COVERED Annual; 1-12/79 14. SPONSORING AGENCY CODE EPA/600/13 is.SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES IERL,-RTP oroject officer is Gary L. Johnson, Mail Drop 63, 919/541-2745. EPA-600/7-79-K6 was the 1978 annual report. i6. ABSTRACT Tne rep0rt is tne second annual report on the Fine Particle Emissions Information System (FPEIS), a computerized data base on primary fine particle emissions from stationary sources. The report summarizes new data added to the FPEIS during 1979 and outlines objectives for 1980 including the emergence of the Environmental Assessment Data Systems (EADS). The FPEIS provides a central- ized inventory of fine particle measurement information for researchers engaged in fine particle control technology development and in the environmental assessment of energy and industrial processes. The first (1978) annual report on FPEIS reported 120 test sites in the data base. By the end of 1979, 47 new test sites had been added to the data base and the total of sampling runs had increased to over 2800. 17. KEY WORDS AND DOCUMENT ANALYSIS DESCRIPTORS b.IDENTIFIERS/OPEN ENDED TERMS c. COSATi Field/Croup Pollution Computer Systems Dust Programs Emission Bioassay Assessments Radiology Industrial Processes Energy Conversion Techniques Chemical Analysis Pollution Control Stationary Sources Particulate Fine Particle Emissions Information System Environmental Assess- ment 13B 11G 14 B 13H 10A 07D 09B 06A 06E 13. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT Release to Public 19. SECURITY CLASS (This Report) Unclassified 21. NO. OF PAGES 63 20. SECURITY CLASS (Thispage) Unclassified 22. PRICE EPA Form 2220-1 (9-73) ------- |