Abstract

An on-stack transmissometer system which is designed to provide a precision measurement of the opacity of visible emissions is described. The sources of error in opacity measurements with regard to recent EPA emission monitoring requirements and planned specifications are discussed. Sources of error are voltage changes, temperature changes, light source and detector aging and effects of ambient light. Other major operational errors are caused by alignment drift and soiling drift. The methods employed to minimize these errors achieve an accuracy of ±3% of span and a maintenance free operational period of 3 months. The relationships between optical density, opacity and transmittance are described. The instrument measurement can be correlated with dust loading provided the particle size distribution is constant. Examples are given of correlations obtained between optical density and particulate concentration in the gas on various types of emission sources and the observed error margins are summarized.

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