0% found this document useful (0 votes)
84 views47 pages

Emission Inventory

An emission inventory is a comprehensive listing of air pollutant emissions from various sources in a given geographic area during a specific time period. Emission inventories are used to identify significant pollution sources, establish emission trends over time, target regulatory actions, and estimate air quality through modeling. They characterize emissions based on factors like base year, pollutants, source types, spatial and temporal resolution, and speciation. Emissions can be estimated using top-down or bottom-up approaches.

Uploaded by

Hsu Mee
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
84 views47 pages

Emission Inventory

An emission inventory is a comprehensive listing of air pollutant emissions from various sources in a given geographic area during a specific time period. Emission inventories are used to identify significant pollution sources, establish emission trends over time, target regulatory actions, and estimate air quality through modeling. They characterize emissions based on factors like base year, pollutants, source types, spatial and temporal resolution, and speciation. Emissions can be estimated using top-down or bottom-up approaches.

Uploaded by

Hsu Mee
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 47

2107-616: Air Quality

Management
Lecture 6: Emission Inventory

อ.ดร. อัจฉริ ยา สุ ริยะวงค์


ภาควิชาวิศวกรรมสิ่ งแวดล้อม
คณะวิศวกรรมศาสตร์ จุฬาลงกรณ์มหาวิทยาลัย

1
Emission Inventory:
 What is an air emission inventory?
 Uses of emissions inventories
 Characteristics: base year, pollutants, source types
 Modeling Inventory needs: temporal and spatial
resolution, speciation
 Emissions inventory development
 Top-down vs. bottom-up
 Emission Inventory techniques (mass balance, source
testing, extrapolation)

2
What is an air emission inventory?
 Inventory - a comprehensive listing by sources of
air pollutant emissions in a geographic area
during a specific time period.

3
Uses of emissions inventories
 Emission inventories are used to help determine
significant sources of air pollutants, establish
emission trends over time, target regulatory
actions, and estimate air quality through computer
dispersion modeling.

 The development of a complete emission


inventory is an important step in an air quality
management process

4
Emission Inventory Characteristics:
 Base year
 Geographic area
 Pollutants
 Source Categories
 Modeling parameters
 Spatial resolution
 Temporal resolution
 Speciation

5
Emission Inventory Characteristics:
 Base Year
 Identifies the year for which emissions are
estimated
 Provides a benchmark for comparison with
previous and future inventories compiled for
different years
 Provides a common basis for all the emission
estimates
 Year is selected based on purpose of the inventory,
 regulatory requirements, and data availability

6
7
Emission Inventory Characteristics:
 Geographic Area
 Establishes geographic domain for the inventory
(can be based on political boundaries, i.e., city,
province, or country borders, air shed boundaries,
or others considerations)
 Is determined based on the purpose of the
inventory (City-, district-, province-level, national
analyses of air quality impacts (e.g., 100 to 500
km2) using modeling
 Determines the sources to be included in the
inventory based on their location
8
Emission Inventory Characteristics:
 Pollutants
 Is selected based on the purpose of the inventory
 Particulate matter analysis: PM10 and PM2.5, secondary aerosols
 Ozone analysis: NOx, VOC primarily (can include other carbon
compounds)
 Visibility analysis
 NOx, SOx, VOC, CO, PM10, PM2.5, NH3
 Elemental and organic carbon (EC/OC)
 Greenhouse gases assessment
 CH4, N2O, CO2
 HFC’s, PCF’s, and SF6
 Ozone depleting substances (ODS)
 CFC’s, HCFC’s, halons, CCl4, methyl chloroform
 (C2H3Cl3), methyl bromide (CH3Br)

9
Emission Inventory Characteristics:
 Source Categories
 Anthropogenic (man-made) and Natural sources may be included
in an inventory.
 Anthropogenic sources include:
 Stationary Point and Nonpoint sources

 Mobile Onroad and Nonroad sources

 Natural sources include:


 Biogenic emissions from vegetation
 Geogenic emissions from soil, volcanoes, and geothermal

 Activities
 Wildfires and wind erosion are classified as either

anthropogenic or natural by different countries


 Indoor and Other source categories
10
Emission Inventory Characteristics: Source Categories

 Point Sources
 Emissions may be released from large or small
point sources.
 Examples include electrical generating facilities,
chemical manufacturing plants, secondary
metal smelters, etc.
 Emissions may be released from: equipment leaks,
transfer of materials from one location to another,
or emissions stacks or vents

11
Emission Inventory Characteristics: Source Categories
 Nonpoint Sources
 Stationary industrial, commercial, institutional
facilities and businesses that are too small or
numerous to be categorized as a point source.
 Examples: dry cleaners, gasoline stations
 Nonpoint sources emit over a geographic “area”
versus point sources that emit over a geographic
“point”
 Examples: residential cooking and heating, wind
erosion of vacant lots and agricultural lands, dust
from vehicle travel over paved and unpaved roads,
consumer solvent use, wildfires
12
Emission Inventory Characteristics: Source Categories

 Mobile Sources
 Pollutants: VOC, PM, CO, Lead, NOx, SO2
 Greenhouse Gases: CO2, N2O, CH4
 20 volatile organic and metal air toxics
 Diesel particulate matter and diesel exhaust

organic gases
 Includes Onroad and Nonroad Sources

13
Emission Inventory Characteristics: Source Categories
Mobile Sources: Onroad
 Onroad - Vehicles found on roads and highways.
 Fuel types - Vehicles may operate on any fuel, including
petrol, diesel, propane, methanol, and electricity
 Vehicle classifications depend on methodology used to
estimate emissions:
 Passenger vehicles, trucks and vans
 Heavy duty trucks with trailers
 Buses and motor homes
 Taxis
 Two and three-wheeled vehicles designed for onroad use
 Emission Types include: Exhaust emissions and
Evaporative emissions
14
Emission Inventory Characteristics: Source Categories
 Mobile Sources: Nonroad - Mobile sources not
found on roads
 Specific categories of nonroad sources vary between
inventories
 Aircraft (may be included in nonpoint sources)
 Locomotives (may be included in nonpoint sources)
 Boats and other marine vessels (may be included in
 nonpoint sources)
 2/4 stroke engines in construction, industrial, and agricultural
equipment, lawn and garden equipment, etc.

15
Emission Inventory Characteristics: Source Categories

 Mobile Source Considerations


 Contribution by source category varies geographically
 May be defined by regulations
 Detail needed: County level, Pollutants, Process
description (for example, SCC)

16
Emission Inventory Characteristics: Source Categories
 Natural Sources
 Natural biological and geological phenomenon
which generate air emissions (nonanthropogenic)
 Biogenic emissions: VOC emissions from
vegetation
 Geogenic emissions:
 NOx emissions from soil (denitrification)

 SOx emissions from volcanoes and geothermal

activity
 • May include wind erosion, wildfires

17
Emission Inventory Characteristics: Source Categories

 Indoor Sources
 Indoor air can become
contaminated from
numerous sources
 Indoor air can have
significantly higher
concentrations of air
pollutants than outdoor
air

18
Emission Inventory Characteristics: Source Categories

 Other Types of Sources


 There are a number of other important sources of air
pollutants that aren’t so easy to categorize or count
 Accidental releases
 Long-range transport of air pollutants
 Historical background (for example, carbon tetrachloride)

19
The Big Picture for Modeling

20
Emissions Inventory
 Development Approaches
 Top-Down approach

 Bottom-Up approach

21
Top-Down Approach
 Methodology:
 General emission factors combined with high

level (national) activity data (e.g., emission


factor x national coal consumption) to estimate
emissions in country or region
 National- or regional-level emissions estimates

scaled to the inventory


 Domain based on surrogate data (geographic,
demographic, economic data)

22
Top-Down Approach
 Typically used when
 Local data are not available

 The cost to gather local information is

prohibitive
 Advantages: Requires minimum resources
 Disadvantages:
 Emissions generally have high level of

uncertainty
 Loss of accuracy in emission estimates

23
Bottom-Up Approach
 Methodology
 Uses source-specific data (for point sources)

and category-specific data at the most


refined spatial level (for nonpoint and
mobile sources)
 Emission estimates for individual sources

(and source categories) are summed to


obtain domain-level inventory

24
Bottom-Up Approach
 Typically used when:
 Source/category-specific activity or emissions data

are available
 End use of inventory justifies the cost of collecting

site-specific data (e.g., for ozone control strategy


demonstration)
 Advantages: Results in more accurate estimates than
a top-down approach
 Disadvantages: Requires more resources to collect
site-specific information than a top-down approach
25
Emission Estimation Techniques
Source Sampling

Emissions Model

Emission Factors
Increasing Cost

(Process-based)

Surveying

Material Balance

Emission Factors
(Census-based)

Extrapolation

Increasing Reliability of Estimate


26
How Do I Choose Emission Estimation
Methods?
Choice of methods depends on:
 Pollutant and source category priorities
 Intended use of the inventory

 Resources

 Availability of data

 Compromise between method accuracy and

cost to implement

27
Source Category Estimation Methods
 Point Source Methods  Nonpoint Source Methods
 Continuous Emission  Surveys and
Monitor (CEM) questionnaires
 Source tests  Material balance
 Material balance  Emission factor x
 Emission factor x activity factors
activity factors  Emission models
 Fuel analysis  Mobile Emission models
 Emission estimation
models
 Engineering judgment

28
Estimation Methods: A Continuous
Emission Monitoring (CEM) System
 Sampling is continuous
 CEMs measure and record actual
emissions during the time period
the monitor is operating and the
data produced can be used to
estimate emissions for different
operating periods.

 CEMs can be required by permit conditions


for some pollutants

29
Estimation Methods: Source Sampling
 Short term emission measurements typically taken
from a stack or vent
 Includes:
 Individual test at facility
 Testing at similar facilities
 Pooled source testing
 Sampling can be infrequent

30
Estimation Methods: Source Sampling
 Emission rates generally reported as concentrations
which must be converted to mass units for use in
emission inventories
 Summarize emissions for each pollutant in terms of:
 Mass loading rate
 Emission factor
 Flue gas concentration
 Results depend upon air pollution control device
performance and design
 Screening measurements can be indicators of
emissions, potential compliance issues
31
Estimation Methods: Fuel Analysis
Used to predict emissions based on the application
of conservation laws
E = Qf x Pollutant in fuel x (MWp/MWf)
where:
Qf = throughput of the fuel, mass rate (e.g. lb/hr)
MWp = molecular weight of pollutant emitted (lb/lb-
mole)
MWf = molecular weight of pollutant in fuel (lb/lb-mole)

32
Estimation Methods: Emissions
Models
Used when
 Calculations are very complex
 Combination of parameters has been identified that

affect emissions, but individually, do not provide a direct


correlation
 Used to calculate emission factors or mass emissions for
specific source categories
 Examples: Mobile exhaust and evaporative emissions,

storage tank evaporation and breathing losses, VOCs


from wastewater treatment facilities

33
Estimation Methods: Emissions
Models
 Generally require that a significant amount of
information be known about the source(s)
being estimated
 Examples: meteorological conditions in

the source area, tank capacity and color,


amount and chemical make-up of wastes
treated
 Mechanistic and multivariate models

34
Emissions Models
 U.S. EPA models include:
 TANKS - volatile liquid storage tanks
(http://www.epa.gov/ttn/chief/software/tanks/index.html)
 WATER9 -wastewater treatment
(http:/www.epa.gov/ttn/chief/software/water/index.html)
 MOBILE6 – onroad motor vehicles
(http://www.epa.gov/otaq/mobile.htm)
 LandGEM -landfills
(http://www.epa.gov/ttn/catc/products.html#software)

35
Emission Factors
 Definition: a ratio that relates the quantity of a
pollutant released to a unit of activity

 Allow development of generalized estimates of


typical emissions from source categories or
individual sources within a category

 Estimates the rate at which a pollutant is released


to the atmosphere as a result of some process

36
Types of Emission Factors
 Process-Based Emission Factors

 Census-Based Emission Factors

37
Calculating Emissions Using Emission Factors
 Emissions = EF × AD × (1 – CE/100)
Where:
EF = emission factor
AD = activity data (throughput)
CE = overall control efficiency (%) = (CAP × CON)/100
 CAP = % of the emissions stream captured by the control
 CON = % of pollutant removed from the emissions stream
 Activity data
 Process weight rates = Mg/year, kg/hour, liter/hour
 Fuel consumption rates = BTU/year, kJ/hour
 Can be expressed in terms of production rates

38
Example:
Estimate VOC Emissions from Industrial Fuel Combustion
Given:
 Quantity of fuel used = 10,000,000 liters/year
 VOC emission factor = 88 kg/106 m3
 CAP = 80% and CON = 90%

39
Example: Estimate VOC emissions from industrial fuel
combustion
 Given:
Quantity of fuel used = 10,000,000 liters/year
VOC emission factor = 88 kg/106 m3
CAP = 80% and CON = 90%
 Solution:
 Estimate overall control efficiency
CE = (80 x 90)/100 = 72%
 Convert fuel used in liters/year to m3 : 10,000,000/1,000 = 10,000
m3
 Calculate annual emissions
Emissions = EF × AD × (1 – CE/100)
Þ 88 kg/106 m3 x (10,000 m3/106) x (1 – 72/100)
Þ = 0.25 kg/year
40
Surveying
 Questionnaires are used to collect activity, controls,
and emissions data from specific source types,
categories
 Can be used to either:
 > Collect all information including emissions estimates and
necessary data fields
 > Collect activity data and information about facility and its
operations
 If emissions are not included as part of survey,
agency develops emission estimates using activity
data collected by survey and emission factor data or
source test data
41
Estimation Methods: Material Balance
 Used:
 When source test data, emission factors, or other
developed methods are not available
 Where accurate measurements can be made of all
process parameters
 For processes where material does not react to form
secondary products or does not undergo significant
chemical change
 For processes like solvent degreasing operations, and
surface coating operations

42
Estimation Methods: Material Balance
 Approach considers all inputs of a material and all possible
fates for the material after passing through the process,
including direct air emissions, fugitive air emissions, solid and
liquid waste streams, and residual product content
 Uses measurements of various components of a process to
determine air emissions:
 Air emissions = Input – liquid emissions – solid wastes – products – by
products – recycled material
 Commonly used to estimate emissions from solvent usage
based on contents of various solvents
 Solvent degreasing operations
 Surface coating operations

43
Examples of Material Balance

44
Estimation Methods: Engineering
Judgment (Extrapolation)
 Described can be used to generate accurate
emission estimates
 Provides an “order of magnitude” estimate with significant
uncertainty
 Scaling emissions estimates to create another inventory
 Using scaling parameters
 Production quantity
 Material throughput
 Land area
 Number of employees
 Population

45
Summary: Emission Inventory
Fundamentals
 Inventories are the fundamental building blocks of
any air quality management program and are used
for a variety of purposes
 Inventory characteristics (e.g., year, pollutants,
sources, spatial and temporal resolution) are
determined by the uses of the inventory
 Modeling inventories have more specific
requirements than more general tracking
inventories

46
Summary: Emission Inventory
Fundamentals
 Emission Inventories can be developed using a
top-down or bottom-up approach.
 A variety of emission estimation methods exist
and are determined by the inventory uses,
pollutant and source category priorities, resources,
and data available
 Compromise between method accuracy and cost
to implement

47

You might also like