섬유
compilation of air pollutant emission factors, third edition supplement no. 9
- 출판일1999.03
- 저자
- 서지사항
- 등록일
2016.11.02
- 조회수
332
in the assessment of community air pollution, there is a critical need for accurate data on the quantity and characteristics of emissions from the numerous sources that contribute to the problem the large number of individual sources and the diversity of source types make conducting field measurements of emissions on a source-by-source basis at the point of release impractical. the only feasible method of determining pollutant emissions for a given community is to make generalized estimates of typical emissions from each of the source types. one of the most useful (and logical) tools for estimating typical emissions is the 'emission factor,' which is an estimate of the rate at which a pollutant is released to the atmosphere as a result of some activity, such as combustion or industrial production, divided by the level of that activity (also expressed in terms of a temporal rate). in other words, the emission factor relates the quantity of pollutants emitted to some indicator (activity level) such as production capacity, quantity of fuel burned, or vehicle miles traveled. in most cases, these factors are simply given as statistical or estimated averages; that is, no empirical information on the various process parameters (temperature, reactant concentrations, etc.) is considered in their calculation however, for a few cases, such as in the estimation of hydrocarbon emissions from petroleum storage tanks, precise empirical formulas relating emissions to such variables as tank diameter, liquid storage temperature, and wind velocity have been developed. because of their superio