Method 10-Determination of Carbon Monoxide Emissions From Stationary Sources (Instrumental Analyzer Procedure)
Method 10-Determination of Carbon Monoxide Emissions From Stationary Sources (Instrumental Analyzer Procedure)
Method 10-Determination of Carbon Monoxide Emissions From Stationary Sources (Instrumental Analyzer Procedure)
version. Please refer to the official version in the FR publication, which appears on the Government Printing
Office's eCFR website:
http://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/textidx?SID=c7836e6ff67e5ad001bcb19ccfd99c1a&node=40:8.0.1.1.1&rgn=div5#40:8.0.1.1.1.0.1.1.4
CAS No.
Sensitivity
CO
630-08-0
1.2 Applicability. When is this method required? The use of Method 10 may be required by
specific New Source Performance Standards, State Implementation Plans, and permits where CO
concentrations in stationary source emissions must be measured, either to determine compliance
with an applicable emission standard or to conduct performance testing of a continuous emission
monitoring system (CEMS). Other regulations may also require the use of Method 10.
1.3 Data Quality Objectives. Refer to section 1.3 of Method 7E.
2.0 Summary of Method
In this method, you continuously or intermittently sample the effluent gas and convey the sample
to an analyzer that measures the concentration of CO. You must meet the performance
requirements of this method to validate your data.
3.0 Definitions
Refer to section 3.0 of Method 7E for the applicable definitions.
4.0 Interferences
Substances having a strong absorption of infrared energy may interfere to some extent in some
analyzers. Instrumental correction may be used to compensate for the interference. You may also
use silica gel and ascarite traps to eliminate the interferences. If this option is used, correct the
measured gas volume for the carbon dioxide (CO2) removed in the trap.
5.0 Safety
Refer to section 5.0 of Method 7E.
6.0 Equipment and Supplies
What do I need for the measurement system?
6.1 Continuous Sampling. Figure 7E-1 of Method 7E is a schematic diagram of an acceptable
measurement system. The components are the same as those in sections 6.1 and 6.2 of Method
7E, except that the CO analyzer described in section 6.2 of this method must be used instead of
the analyzer described in section 6.2 of Method 7E. You must follow the noted specifications in
section 6.1 of Method 7E except that the requirements to use stainless steel, Teflon, or nonreactive glass filters do not apply. Also, a heated sample line is not required to transport dry
gases or for systems that measure the CO concentration on a dry basis.
6.2 Integrated Sampling.
6.2.1 Air-Cooled Condenser or Equivalent. To remove any excess moisture.
6.2.2 Valve. Needle valve, or equivalent, to adjust flow rate.
6.2.3 Pump. Leak-free diaphragm type, or equivalent, to transport gas.
6.2.4 Rate Meter. Rotameter, or equivalent, to measure a flow range from 0 to 1.0 liter per
minute (0.035 cfm).
6.2.5 Flexible Bag. Tedlar, or equivalent, with a capacity of 60 to 90 liters (2 to 3 ft3). (Verify
through the manufacturer that the Tedlar alternative is suitable for CO and make this verified
information available for inspection.) Leak-test the bag in the laboratory before using by
evacuating with a pump followed by a dry gas meter. When the evacuation is complete, there
should be no flow through the meter. Gas tanks may be used in place of bags if the samples are
analyzed within one week.
6.3 What analyzer must I use? You must use an instrument that continuously measures CO in the
gas stream and meets the specifications in section 13.0. The dual-range analyzer provisions in
section 6.2.8.1 of Method 7E apply.
7.0 Reagents and Standards
7.1 Calibration Gas. What calibration gases do I need? Refer to section 7.1 of Method 7E for
the calibration gas requirements.
7.2 Interference Check. What additional reagents do I need for the interference check? Use the
appropriate test gases listed in Table 7E-3 of Method 7E (i.e., potential interferents, as identified
by the instrument manufacturer) to conduct the interference check.
8.0 Sample Collection, Preservation, Storage, and Transport
Emission Test Procedure
8.1 Sampling Site and Sampling Points. You must follow section 8.1 of Method 7E.
8.2 Initial Measurement System Performance Tests. You must follow the procedures in section
8.2 of Method 7E. If a dilution-type measurement system is used, the special considerations in
section 8.3 of Method 7E also apply.
8.3 Interference Check. You must follow the procedures of section 8.2.7 of Method 7E.
8.4 Sample Collection.
8.4.1 Continuous Sampling. You must follow the procedures of section 8.4 of Method 7E.
8.4.2 Integrated Sampling. Evacuate the flexible bag. Set up the equipment as shown in Figure
10-1 with the bag disconnected. Place the probe in the stack and purge the sampling line.
Connect the bag, making sure that all connections are leak-free. Sample at a rate proportional to
the stack velocity. If needed, the CO2 content of the gas may be determined by using the Method
3 integrated sample procedures, or by weighing an ascarite CO2 removal tube used and
computing CO2concentration from the gas volume sampled and the weight gain of the tube. Data
may be recorded on a form similar to Table 10-1. If a tank is used for sample collection, follow
procedures similar to those in Sections 8.1.2, 8.2.3, 8.3, and 12.4 of Method 25 as appropriate to
prepare the tank, conduct the sampling, and correct the measured sample concentration.
8.5 Post-Run System Bias Check, Drift Assessment, and Alternative Dynamic Spike
Procedure. You must follow the procedures in sections 8.5 and 8.6 of Method 7E.
9.0 Quality Control
Where:
CAvg = Average gas concentration for the test run, ppm.
CCO stack = Average unadjusted stack gas CO concentration indicated by the data recorder for the
test run, ppmv.
FCO2 = Volume fraction of CO2 in the sample, i.e., percent CO2 from Orsat analysis divided by
100.
13.0 Method Performance
The specifications for analyzer calibration error, system bias, drift, interference check, and
alternative dynamic spike procedure are the same as in section 13.0 of Method 7E.
14.0 Pollution Prevention [Reserved]
15.0 Waste Management [Reserved]
16.0 Alternative Procedures
The dynamic spike procedure and the manufacturer stability test are the same as in sections 16.1
and 16.3 of Method 7E
17.0 References
1. EPA Traceability Protocol for Assay and Certification of Gaseous Calibration Standards
September 1997 as amended, EPA-600/R-97/121
18.0 Tables, Diagrams, Flowcharts, and Validation Data
Date:
Operator:
Rotameter Reading liters/min (cfm)
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