Unit 1 Notes
Unit 1 Notes
Unit 1 Notes
Sources and classification of Air Pollutants: Natural air pollutants-aerosol gases and
vapour-Meteorology and Air pollution: Atmospheric stability and inversions-mixing height-
plume behaviour-plume rise estimation-Impact of air pollutants on human / structure /
vegetation / global warming-Effluent dispersion theories-Isokinetic sampling-Modeling.
Air pollution:
Air pollution is the human introduction of chemicals, particulate matter or biological
materials that causes harm or discomfort to humans or other living organisms or damages the
natural environment. The presence in the atmospheric environment of natural and artificial
substances that affect human health or well- being, or the well-being of any other organism is
air pollution. Air pollution causes death and respiratory diseases. It is also one of the main
reasons for ozone depletion.
Composition of air:
The Earth’s atmosphere is a layer of gases surrounding the planet Earth. Dry air
contains roughly 78.8% nitrogen, 20.95 % oxygen, 0.93% argon, 0.038% carbon dioxide and
trace amounts of other gases.
“Presence of one or more contaminants such as fumes, dust, gases, mist, grit, odour,
smoke, aerosol, smog, plume or fog in considerable quantities, which is injurious to health, of
human, animal or plant life or which interferes with the comfortable enjoyment of life and
prosperity” is known as air pollution.
ii. Ground level ozone (O3) formed from NOx and VOCs. Ozone (O3) is a key constituent of
the troposphere (it is also an important constituent of certain regions of the stratosphere
commonly known as the Ozone layer). Photochemical and chemical reactions involving it
drive many of the chemical processes that occur in the atmosphere by day and by night. At
abnormally high concentrations brought about by human activities (largely the combustion of
fossil fuel), it is a pollutant, and a constituent of smog.
iii. Peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN) – similarly formed from NOx and VOCs.
Anthropogenic sources (human activity) mostly related to burning different kinds of fuel:
ii. “Mobile Sources” include motor vehicles, marine vessels, aircraft and the effect of sound
etc.
iii. Chemicals, dust and controlled burn practices in agriculture and forestry management.
Controlled or prescribed burning is a technique sometimes used in forest management,
farming, prairie restoration or greenhouse gas abatement. Fire is a natural part of both forest
and grassland ecology and controlled fire can be a tool for foresters. Controlled burning
stimulates the germination of some desirable forest trees, thus renewing the forest.
iv. Fumes from paint, hair spray, varnish, aerosol sprays and other solvents.
v. Waste deposition in landfills, which generate methane. Methane is not toxic; however, it is
highly flammable and may form explosive mixtures with air. Methane is also an asphyxiate
and may displace oxygen in an enclosed space. Asphyxia or suffocation may result if the
oxygen concentration is reduced to below 19.5% by displacement.
v. Military, such as nuclear weapons, toxic gases, germ warfare and rocketry.
Natural sources:
i. Dust from natural sources, usually large areas of land with little or no vegetation.
ii. Methane, emitted by the digestion of food by animals, for example cattle.
iii. Radon gas from radioactive decay within the Earth’s crust. Radon is a colourless,
odourless, naturally occurring, radioactive noble gas that is formed from the decay of radium.
It is considered to be a health hazard. Radon gas from natural sources can accumulate in
buildings, especially in confined areas such as the basement and it is the second most
frequent cause of lung cancer, after cigarette smoking.
Aerosols are minute particles suspended in the atmosphere. When these particles are
sufficiently large, we notice their presence as they scatter and absorb sunlight. Their
scattering of sunlight can reduce visibility (haze) and redden sunrises and sunsets.
Aerosols interact both directly and indirectly with the Earth's radiation budget and
climate. As a direct effect, the aerosols scatter sunlight directly back into space. As an
indirect effect, aerosols in the lower atmosphere can modify the size of cloud particles,
changing how the clouds reflect and absorb sunlight, thereby affecting the Earth's energy
budget.
Aerosols also can act as sites for chemical reactions to take place (heterogeneous
chemistry). The most significant of these reactions are those that lead to the destruction of
stratospheric ozone. During winter in the polar regions, aerosols grow to form polar
stratospheric clouds. The large surface areas of these cloud particles provide sites for
chemical reactions to take place. These reactions lead to the formation of large amounts of
reactive chlorine and, ultimately, to the destruction of ozone in the stratosphere. Evidence
now exists that shows similar changes in stratospheric ozone concentrations occur after major
volcanic eruptions, like Mt. Pinatubo in 1991, where tons of volcanic aerosols are blown into
the atmosphere
The dispersal of volcanic aerosols has a drastic effect on Earth's atmosphere. Follow an
eruption, large amounts of sulphur dioxide (SO2), hydrochloric acid (HCL) and ash are
spewed into Earth's stratosphere. HCL, in most cases, condenses with water vapor and is
rained out of the volcanic cloud formation. SO2 from the cloud is transformed into sulphuric
acid, H2SO4. The sulphuric acid quickly condenses, producing aersol particles which linger in
the atmosphere for long periods of time. The interaction of chemicals on the surface of
aerosols, known as heterogeneous chemistry, and the tendency of aerosols to increase levels
of chlorine gas react with nitrogen in the stratopshere, is a prime contributor to stratospheric
ozone destruction.
Volcanic Aerosol
Three types of aerosols significantly affect the Earth's climate. The first is the
volcanic aerosol layer which forms in the stratosphere after major volcanic eruptions like Mt.
Pinatubo. The dominant aerosol layer is actually formed by sulfur dioxide gas which is
converted to droplets of sulfuric acid in the stratosphere over the course of a week to several
months after the eruption. Winds in the stratosphere spread the aerosols until they practically
cover the globe. Once formed, these aerosols stay in the stratosphere for about two years.
They reflect sunlight, reducing the amount of energy reaching the lower atmosphere and the
Earth's surface, cooling them. The relative coolness of 1993 is thought to have been a
response to the stratospheric aerosol layer that was produced by the Mt. Pinatubo eruption. In
1995, though several years had passed since the Mt. Pinatubo eruption, remnants of the layer
remained in the atmosphere. Data from satellites such as the NASA Langley Stratospheric
Aerosol and Gas Experiment II (SAGE II) have enabled scientists to better understand the
effects of volcanic aerosols on our atmosphere.
Desert Dust
The second type of aerosol that may have a significant effect on climate is desert dust.
Pictures from weather satellites often reveal dust veils streaming out over the Atlantic Ocean
from the deserts of North Africa. Fallout from these layers has been observed at various
locations on the American continent. Similar veils of dust stream off deserts on the Asian
continent. The September 1994 Lidar In-space Technology Experiment (LITE), aboard the
space shuttle Discovery (STS-64), measured large quantities of desert dust in the lower
atmosphere over Africa. The particles in these dust plumes are minute grains of dirt blown
from the desert surface. They are relatively large for atmospheric aerosols and would
normally fall out of the atmosphere after a short flight if they were not blown to relatively
high altitudes (15,000 ft. and higher) by intense dust storms.
Because the dust is composed of minerals, the particles absorb sunlight as well as
scatter it. Through absorption of sunlight, the dust particles warm the layer of the atmosphere
where they reside. This warmer air is believed to inhibit the formation of storm clouds.
Through the suppression of storm clouds and their consequent rain, the dust veil is believed
to further desert expansion.
Recent observations of some clouds indicate that they may be absorbing more
sunlight than was thought possible. Because of their ability to absorb sunlight, and their
transport over large distances, desert aerosols may be the culprit for this additional absorption
of sunlight by some clouds.
Human-Made Aerosol
The third type of aerosol comes from human activities. While a large fraction of
human-made aerosols come in the form of smoke from burning tropical forests, the major
component comes in the form of sulfate aerosols created by the burning of coal and oil. The
concentration of human-made sulfate aerosols in the atmosphere has grown rapidly since the
start of the industrial revolution. At current production levels, human-made sulfate aerosols
are thought to outweigh the naturally produced sulfate aerosols. The concentration of aerosols
is highest in the northern hemisphere where industrial activity is centered. The sulfate
aerosols absorb no sunlight but they reflect it, thereby reducing the amount of sunlight
reaching the Earth's surface. Sulfate aerosols are believed to survive in the atmosphere for
about 3-5 days.
The sulfate aerosols also enter clouds where they cause the number of cloud droplets
to increase but make the droplet sizes smaller. The net effect is to make the clouds reflect
more sunlight than they would without the presence of the sulfate aerosols. Pollution from the
stacks of ships at sea has been seen to modify the low-lying clouds above them. These
changes in the cloud droplets, due to the sulfate aerosols from the ships, have been seen in
pictures from weather satellites as a track through a layer of clouds. In addition to making the
clouds more reflective, it is also believed that the additional aerosols cause polluted clouds to
last longer and reflect more sunlight than non-polluted clouds.
The warming effect of the greenhouse gases is expected to take place everywhere, but
the cooling effect of the pollution aerosols will be somewhat regionally dependent, near and
downwind of industrial areas. No one knows what the outcome will be of atmospheric
warming in some regions and cooling in others. Climate models are still too primitive to
provide reliable insight into the possible outcome. Current observations of the buildup are
available only for a few locations around the globe and these observations are fragmentary.
Understanding how much sulfur-based pollution is present in the atmosphere is important for
understanding the effectiveness of current sulfur dioxide pollution control strategies.
It is believed that much of the removal of atmospheric aerosols occurs in the vicinity
of large weather systems and high altitude jet streams, where the stratosphere and the lower
atmosphere become intertwined and exchange air with each other. In such regions, many
pollutant gases in the troposphere can be injected in the stratosphere, affecting the chemistry
of the stratosphere. Likewise, in such regions, the ozone in the stratosphere is brought down
to the lower atmosphere where it reacts with the pollutant rich air, possibly forming new
types of pollution aerosols.
Aerosol measurements can also be used as tracers to study how the Earth's
atmosphere moves. Because aerosols change their characteristics very slowly, they make
much better tracers for atmospheric motions than a chemical species that may vary its
concentration through chemical reactions. Aerosols have been used to study the dynamics of
the polar regions, stratospheric transport from low to high latitudes, and the exchange of air
between the troposphere and stratosphere.
In the spring of 1996, the Subsonic Aircraft Contrail and Cloud Effects Special Study
(SUCCESS) focused on subsonic aircraft contrails and the impact of the aerosols in those
contrails on cirrus clouds and atmospheric chemistry. Researchers have determined that
aircraft contrails can prolong the presence of high altitude cirrus clouds while also decreasing
the size of the ice crystals that make up the clouds.Studies like SUCCESS and AEAP will be
ongoing as scientists continue to try to understand how aerosols affect our atmosphere and
climate.
Take a deep breath. Even if the air looks clear, it’s nearly certain that you’ll inhale
tens of millions of solid particles and liquid droplets. These ubiquitous specks of matter are
known as aerosols, and they can be found in the air over oceans, deserts, mountains, forests,
ice, and every ecosystem in between. They drift in Earth’s atmosphere from the stratosphere
to the surface and range in size from a few nanometers less than the width of the smallest
viruses to several several tens of micrometers about the diameter of human hair. Despite their
small size, they have major impacts on our climate and our health.
Different specialists describe the particles based on shape, size, and chemical
composition. Toxicologists refer to aerosols as ultrafine, fine, or coarse matter. Regulatory
agencies, as well as meteorologists, typically call them particulate matter PM2.5 or PM10,
depending on their size. In some fields of engineering, they’re called nanoparticles. The
media often uses everyday terms that hint at aerosol sources, such as smoke, ash, and soot.
Climatologists typically use another set of labels that speak to the chemical
composition. Key aerosol groups include sulfates, organic carbon, black carbon, nitrates,
mineral dust, and sea salt. In practice, many of these terms are imperfect, as aerosols often
clump together to form complex mixtures. It’s common, for example, for particles of black
carbon from soot or smoke to mix with nitrates and sulfates, or to coat the surfaces of dust,
creating hybrid particles.
The bulk of aerosols about 90 percent by mass have natural origins. Volcanoes, for
example, eject huge columns of ash into the air, as well as sulfur dioxide and other gases,
yielding sulfates. Forest fires send partially burned organic carbon aloft. Certain plants
produce gases that react with other substances in the air to yield aerosols, such as the
“smoke” in the Great Smoky Mountains of the United States. Likewise in the ocean, some
types of microalgae produce a sulfurous gas called dimethylsulfide that can be converted into
sulfates in the atmosphere. Sea salt and dust are two of the most abundant aerosols, as
sandstorms whip small pieces of mineral dust from deserts into the atmosphere and wind-
driven spray from ocean waves flings sea salt aloft. Both tend to be larger particles than their
human-made counterparts.
Fossil fuel combustion produces large amounts of sulfur dioxide, which reacts with
water vapor and other gases in the atmosphere to create sulfate aerosols. Biomass burning, a
common method of clearing land and consuming farm waste, yields smoke that’s comprised
mainly of organic carbon and black carbon.
Patterns
When viewed from space, a number of patterns emerge from Earth’s aerosols some
driven by nature and others by man.
Nature generates broad swaths of particles detectable by satellites over both water and
land. The strong winds of the “roaring forties” latitudes, for example, create a heavy band of
airborne salt north of Antarctica. A thinner and more evenly dispersed veil of aerosols
primarily salt from whitecaps and sulfates from microalgae usually covers most of the
world’s oceans. Over land, massive plumes of dust blow above deserts.
Meanwhile, the eastern portion of the United States and urban areas in Europe are
hotspots for the production of human-made aerosols. Plumes of industrial aerosols typically
sulfates from coal power plants and black and organic carbon from vehicle traffic rise from
cities such as New York, Pittsburgh, London, and Berlin.
The western portion of the United States is comparatively clear, though some areas
experience aerosol loads that rival the worst conditions in the East. Industrial aerosols, dust,
and wildfire smoke frequently pollute the air in the Los Angeles Basin. Agriculture can
produce heavy loads of soil dust, especially in California’s San Joaquin and Imperial valleys,
and the largest localized source of dust in the western U.S. is Owens Dry Lake, a river bed
that was drained to provide water for LA. Likewise, the port of Houston has some of the most
aerosol-laden air in the world.
However, the most aerosol-laden air in the United States today pales in comparison to
Asia. Satellites can detect a visible pall of aerosol clouds over Bangladesh, northern India,
and northern Pakistan an area called the Indo-Gangetic plain, especially during the pre-
Monsoon season. The aerosol layer is comprised of complex mixtures of dust blowing from
the Thar Desert and pollution from the densely populated plain. In eastern China, fast-
growing cities such as Beijing also produce heavy blankets of aerosol.
Depending on the season and weather conditions, surges of aerosols can make their
way into the atmosphere almost anywhere on Earth. In the Northern Hemisphere, plumes of
mineral dust swirl over deserts and arid regions. In the Southern Hemisphere, slash-and-burn
agriculture in the Amazon and Central Africa releases large amounts of smoke and soot.
Fires, some sparked by lightning and some by human activity, leave large patches of forest
ablaze during summers in Canada, Russia, and the United States.
Although most aerosols remain suspended in the atmosphere for short periods
typically between four days and a week they can travel vast distances. Particles moving with
the atmosphere at 5 meters (16.4 feet) per second will travel thousands of kilometers in a
week. Dust plumes from the Sahara frequently cross the Atlantic and reach the Caribbean.
Winds sweep a mixture of Asian aerosols particularly dust from the Gobi desert and pollution
from China east over Japan and toward the central Pacific Ocean. Smoke from wildfires in
Siberia and Canada can find its way to the Arctic ice cap.
The Sun provides the energy that drives Earth’s climate, but not all of the energy that
reaches the top of the atmosphere finds its way to the surface. That’s because aerosols and
clouds seeded by them reflect about a quarter of the Sun’s energy back to space.
Although most aerosols reflect sunlight, some also absorb it. An aerosol’s effect on
light depends primarily on the composition and color of the particles. Broadly speaking,
bright-colored or translucent particles tend to reflect radiation in all directions and back
towards space. Darker aerosols can absorb significant amounts of light.
Pure sulfates and nitrates reflect nearly all radiation they encounter, cooling the
atmosphere. Black carbon, in contrast, absorbs radiation readily, warming the atmosphere but
also shading the surface. Organic carbon, sometimes called brown carbon or organic matter,
has a warming influence on the atmosphere depending on the brightness of the underlying
ground. Dust impacts radiation to varying degrees, depending on the composition of the
minerals that comprise the dust grains, and whether they are coated with black or brown
carbon. Salt particles tend to reflect all the sunlight they encounter.
Whereas aerosols can influence climate by scattering light and changing Earth’s
reflectivity, they can also alter the climate via clouds. On a global scale, these aerosol
“indirect effects” typically work in opposition to greenhouse gases and cause cooling. While
greenhouse gases disperse widely and have a fairly consistent impact from region to region,
aerosol effects are less consistent, partly because of how the particles affect clouds.
Most elementary school students learn that clouds form when enough water vapor
condenses. That’s true, but aerosols play a critical role in the process. In fact, most clouds
owe their existence to aerosols that serve as the tiny “seeds,” called cloud condensation
nuclei.
Natural aerosols often sulfates, sea salt or ammonium salts are the most common
condensation nuclei in pristine environments. Polluted air, in contrast, usually contains much
higher concentrations of water-soluble particles, which means pollution-rich clouds tend to
have more numerous, but smaller, droplets. The small droplets make polluted clouds look
brighter than they would otherwise be. Just as many bits of crushed ice give light more
surfaces to reflect off appearing brighter than a solid cube of ice if the water in a cloud is
divided into a larger number of smaller droplets, it will scatter more light and become more
reflective.
Atmosphere:
The earth's atmosphere is a very thin layer wrapped around a very large planet.
Two gases make up the bulk of the earth's atmosphere: nitrogen, which comprises
78% of the atmosphere, and oxygen which accounts for 21%.
Based on temperature, the atmosphere is divided into four layers: the troposphere,
stratosphere, mesosphere, and thermosphere.
Energy is transferred between the earth's surface and the atmosphere via conduction,
convection, and radiation.
Ocean currents play a significant role in transferring heat poleward. Major currents,
such as the northward flowing Gulf Stream, transport tremendous amounts of heat
poleward and contribute to the development of many types of weather phenomena.
Properties of Atmosphere:
The first 64 to 80 km above the earth contains 99% of the total mass of the earth's
atmosphere and is generally of a uniform composition, except for a high concentration
of ozone, known as the ozone layer, at 19 to 50 km.
Calculated according to their relative volumes, the gaseous constituents of the
atmosphere are nitrogen, 78.09%; oxygen, 20.95%; argon, 0.93%; carbon dioxide,
0.03%; and minute traces of neon, helium, methane, krypton, hydrogen, xenon, and
ozone.
The lower atmosphere contains varying amounts of water vapor, which determine
its humidity.
Condensation and sublimation within the atmosphere cause clouds or fog, and the
resulting liquid water droplets or ice crystals may precipitate to the ground as rain,
sleet, snow, hail, dew, or frost.
The air also carries many kinds of dust, of meteoric as well as terrestrial origin, and
microorganisms, pollen, salt particles, and various gaseous and solid impurities
resulting from human activity.
Because of the pull of gravity the density of the atmosphere and the pressure exerted
by air molecules are greatest near the earth's surface (about 1 gram per 103 cc).
Composition of Atmosphere:
1) Nitrogen 78.08%
2) Oxygen 20.95%
3) Argon 0.93% (9300 ppm)
4) Carbon Dioxide 0.035% (350 ppm)
5) Neon 18 ppm
6) Helium 5.2 ppm
7) Methane 1.4 ppm
8) Ozone 0.07 ppm
The troposphere is hotter near the Earth's surface because heat from the Earth warms this
air. The Mesosphere, like the troposphere layer, has a decrease in temperature with altitude
because of the decrease in the density of the air molecules. Thermosphere: As the altitude
increases, the air temperature increases.
In the troposphere, the source of heat is the surface of the Earth as well as particles in the
air which absorb heat and energy from the Sun and release it back into the atmosphere. The
ozone layer absorbs radiation from the Sun, helping to increase the temperature in the upper
portion of the stratosphere.
The atmospheric lapse rate refers to the change of an atmospheric variable with a
change of altitude, the variable being temperature unless specified otherwise (such
as pressure, density or humidity).
Lapse rates are usually expressed as the amount of temperature change associated
with a specified amount of altitude change, such as 9.8 K per kilometre, 0.0098 K
per metre or the equivalent 5.4 °F per 1000 feet.
If the atmospheric air cools with increasing altitude, the lapse rate may be expressed
as a negative number. If the air heats with increasing altitude, the lapse rate may be
expressed as a positive number.
Lapse rate:
Lapse rate is rate of change in temperature observed while moving upward through
the Earth’s atmosphere (troposphere to be specific).
The lapse rate is considered positive when the temperature decreases with
elevation, zero when the temperature is constant with elevation, and negative when
the temperature increases with elevation (temperature inversion).
The lapse rate of non rising air commonly referred to as the normal
or Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) is highly variable, being affected
by radiation, convection, and condensation; it averages about 5 °C per kilometer in
the lower atmosphere (troposphere).
Absolute stability: ALR (at a place) > DALR Little moisture in the air parcel It won’t
rain
Conditional stability: WALR < ALR < DALR Normal moisture conditions It may or
may not rain
Absolute instability: ALR (at a place) < WALR Excess moisture in the air parcel It
will rain violently.
Mixing height:
The mixing height is the height of vertical mixing of air and suspended particles
above the ground. This height is determined by the observation of the atmospheric
temperature profile. A parcel of air rising from the surface of the Earth will rise at a given
rate (called the dry-adiabatic lapse rate). As long as the parcel of air is warmer than the
ambient temperature, it will continue to rise. However, once it becomes colder than the
temperature of the environment, it will slow down and eventually stop. It is at this junction
where the temperature of the parcel crosses the curve denoting the vertical environmental
temperature profile determines the mixing height.
Plume behaviour:
The dispersion of emitted gases from the source of their production is known as
plume and the source is known as stack.
Types of Plume:
Continuous Plume: The release and the sampling time are long compared with the
travel time.
Puff Diffusion / Instantaneous Plume: The release time or sampling time is short
when compared with the travel time.
Types of Plume Rise:
Buoyancy Effect: Rise due to the temperature difference between stack plume and
ambient air.
Momentum Rise: Rise due to exit velocity of the effluents (emissions).
Frontal inversion:
Frontal Inversions are inversions caused by a shallow "cold front" blowing in under
warmer air. In other words, sometimes a bunch of cold air, called an air mass, will
get blown by the wind from one place to another, warmer place, and will get blown
underneath the warm air, causing an inversion.
Sometimes you hear about a "cold front" or a "warm front" moving in from
somewhere. What this is referring to is when wind is blowing from a cold or warm
place, and causing a large pocket of that air, also called an "air mass," to come to
where you are.
If this is a cold air mass, and it is small enough it blows under the current, warmer air
without pushing all the warm air away, this can cause an inversion
These inversions generally last until either the cold front blows on to somewhere
else, or until that air is warmed up by the sun.
Marine Inversions:
Marine Inversions occur in places near large bodies of water, especially in the spring
when the water is the most chilly.
When air passes over these large bodies of water, it is cooled by the heat getting
conducted from the air to the water. This cold air is then blown inland under the
warmer air that is over the land, thus creating an inversion.
Subsidence Inversions:
Effects of Inversions:
One of the most harmful effects of inversions is that they trap the pollution close to
the ground, trapping the smog.
Besides trapping smog, inversions also trap sound waves. Because of this, the loud
sounds of things like airplanes taking off will seem louder as the sound waves refract
off the inversion layer and back down to the ground.
But sound waves aren't the only thing that gets refracted by weather inversions. light
can be bent by the inconsistency of the temperature. When an inversion is not present,
but the ground temperature is significantly hotter than the air higher up like in the
desert, the bending of light causes mirages in the form of thinking that there is a lake
or puddle up ahead.
Really, it is the sky reflecting off of the ground because of the extreme change in
temperature when there is a temperature inversion, the affect is just the opposite. If
the inversion is strong enough, it can cause far off objects to look like they are
floating above the ground. If things are far enough they are past the curvature of the
earth, they may become visible. This reverse or "superior" mirage is called looming.
Briggs divided air pollution plumes into these four general categories:
Briggs considered the trajectory of cold jet plumes to be dominated by their initial
velocity momentum, and the trajectory of hot, buoyant plumes to be dominated by their
buoyant momentum to the extent that their initial velocity momentum was relatively
unimportant. Although Briggs proposed plume rise equations for each of the above plume
categories, it is important to emphasize that "the Briggs equations" which become widely
used are those that he proposed for bent-over, hot buoyant plumes.
In general, Briggs's equations for bent-over, hot buoyant plumes are based on
observations and data involving plumes from typical combustion sources such as the flue gas
stacks from steam generating boilers burning fossil fuels in large power plants. Therefore the
stack exit velocities were probably in the range of 20 to 100 ft/s (6 to 30 m/s) with exit
temperatures ranging from 250 to 500 °F (120 to 260 °C).
Effective Stack Height:
Plumes rise vertically from a smokestack before starting to disperse according to the
Gaussian model. Therefore, because of the plume rise, the centerline of the Gaussian model
is higher than the height of the stack. The “effective stack height”, which is stack height
plus vertical plume rise, is used in the Gaussian model for more accurate calculations of
pollution concentration from a point source.
Where:
Ua = wind speed at altitude Za, m/s
H = effective stack height, m
Za= height above surface, m (usually 10 meters)
p = exponent is a function of atmospheric stability class
Air sampling:
Air pollution sampling: Related to analysis of pollutants in a given volume of air.
Air sampling: Capturing the contaminant from a known volume of air, measuring the
amount of contaminant captured, and expressing it as a concentration. The air is passed
through a filter medium (normally a paper for solid & liquid contaminants and a sorbent for
gases). The volume of air is measured against the amount of contaminant captured. This gives
the concentration, which is expressed either as milligrams per cubic metre (mg/m3) or parts
per million (ppm). The volume of air is calculated by multiplying the flow rate through the
filter medium by the time in minutes.
1) Sampling for Monitoring:
a) Ambient air quality monitoring
b) Stack air quality monitoring
2) Sampling for pollutants:
a) Air sampling based on the particulate pollutant
b) Air sampling based on the gaseous and vapor pollutant
3) Industrial exposure sampling:
a) Grab Sampling
b) Short-term Exposure Sampling
c) Full-shift Exposure Sampling
Types of contaminants:
There are three types of contaminant according to their physical properties:
1) Particulates
2) Vapours
3) Gases
Particulates can be further subdivided into five types:
i. Aerosols
ii. Dusts
iii. Fumes
iv. Smokes
v. Mists
Aerosol : Dispersion of solid particles of microscopic size in air.
Dust: Solid particulate capable of temporary suspension in air.
Fume: Solid particles produced by condensation from the gaseous phase. Fumes are usually
derived from the heating of a solid to its melting point and the subsequent cooling of the gas
produced.
Smoke: Particles resulting from the incomplete combustion of organic matter consisting
predominantly of carbon and oxides of carbon.
Mist: Dispersion in air of liquid droplets usually large enough to be
seen by the naked eye.
Vapour: Gaseous phase of a substance that usually exists as a liquid or solid at normal room
temperature and pressure.
Gas: A substance which does not normally exist as a liquid or solid at normal room
temperature and pressure.
Air sampling calculation:
An air sample requires three basic measurements:
1) Amount of pollutant collected
2) Flow of air through the medium
3) The run time in minutes
Flow×time(in minute)=volume through filter in cubic meter
Concentration in microgram per cubic meter or in ppm
Air sampling techniques based on the particulate pollutants
Sedimentation
Filtration
Impingement
Precipitation
Thermal precipitation
Electrostatic precipitation
Air sampling techniques of the gaseous pollutants
Absorption sampling
Adsorption sampling
Condensation sampling
Point Sources
Point source models are a way to represent a steady stream of pollutants being ejected
from a smokestack. The point source model mostly used is a Gaussian distribution,
which is a statistical representation of the dispersion of emissions from the stack in a
given space.
Line Sources
Line source models are a way to represent a steady stream of vehicles travelling along
a road. The line source model mostly used is a Gaussian distribution, which is a
statistical representation of the dispersion of emissions from the road in a given space.
Isokinetic sampling:
Principles of isokinetic extraction:
Purpose is to capture particles that pass through a defined area for a defined time
without disturbing their paths.
The velocity of the air going into the sampling probe nozzle is equal to the velocity of
the undisturbed air at that point.
The air is disturbed as little as possible so that the same particles (no more and no
less) go into the nozzle as would have passed the area of the nozzle had it not been
there.
Sampling from fluid streams of air, flue gas, steam, or any media that contains entrained
particles is a very tricky affair. If the fluid is homogenous, the sampling is relatively simple
since the fluid has the same consistency throughout the flow area. This is not the case with
fluids having entrained particles. Particle concentration changes because of the flow pattern
inside the fluid stream. Let us consider the example of measuring particulate emission from a
coal fired power plant. The norm in most of the countries around the world is around 50
mg/Nm3. Non compliance results in stiff penalties and even closure of the plant. To prove
that the plant is running at these levels, particulate samples from the flue gas ducts are
analyzed. The key step is getting the correct sample. There are two major problems in getting
a correct sample.
1) The large cross section area of the flue gas duct results in flow segregation due to
many reasons. Taking a large number of samples from points across the duct avoids
the effect of this segregation.
2) The sample is drawn out of the flue gas duct by suction from each point through a
sampling tube. If the sampling velocity at the point of sampling is less than the fluid
velocity, then all the particles, especially the smaller size particles, will not enter the
sampling tube. If the velocity is more, then more particles will enter the tube, again
especially the smaller particles. Both conditions produce samples with wrong
concentration. Ideally, the flow of the sample through the sampling system should be
such that the velocity at the sampling point inlet is the same as the velocity of flue gas
at that point. This is called Isokinetic Sampling.
Isokinetic sampling is widely used in dust and particle measurements in power plants,
furnaces, kilns, and scrubbers. Ambient air pollution measurements also make use of this
method. Other applications in coal-fired power plants include sampling of pulverized coal
and sampling steam to check the purity before in enters the turbine. Crude oil sampling at
transfer points to check the impurities is another application.
Isokinetic Sampling method:
An ideal isokinetic sampling system consists of a probe that inserts and traverses
along the section of a duct or pipe. It has a velocity measuring point at the tip, the sampling
tube, and a temperature measurement point. The probe includes a sampling flow adjustment
valve. After measuring the velocity and making the sampling flow adjustments, samples are
drawn. This gives an isokinetic sample at each point. Sampling of steam and other fluids at
high temperatures and pressure make use of fixed nozzles sized to get isokinetic flow.
Isokinetic sampling is an elaborate process used for collecting samples that have commercial
or legal implications. This is also the primary sampling method for the calibration of online
instruments. The isokinetic sampling unit is shown below.