Abstract
An approach for measuring point-source emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), acidic vapors, and other species is presented. The amount emitted is determined by directly measuring the actual weight gain of an adsorbent bed over a period of time, which is a cumulative rather than a grabbed sample. As a result, wide fluctuations of concentration and erratic flow behavior during sampling are accommodated with no apparent effect on the accuracy of the measured emission rate. The emission rate is determined by a mass balance including the mass change of the sorbent, as well as the influent and effluent humidities. Validation tests used a known mass flow rate of vapor in a carrier gas, which was compared with the amount measured. The vapor was a single VOC, a mixture of VOCs, or a mixture of a VOC with water. Conditions studied were the compound or mixture of compounds, concentration, carrier gas, flow rate, and adsorbent. In some tests the VOC was admitted intermittently. The VOCs included n-hexane, acetone, toluene, vinyl acetate, and 1,1,1 trichloroethane. For 105 tests, the average absolute discrepancy of the delivered and measured emission rates was 6.8% and the standard deviation was 3.4%.
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