Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 3 OF 5

Main Title Standardizing Boom Test Procedures.
Author Borst, M. ; Lichte, H. W. ;
CORP Author Mason and Hanger-Silas Mason Co., Inc., Leonardo, NJ.;Muncipial Environmental Research Lab., Cincinnati, OH.
Year Published 1984
Report Number EPA-68-03-3203; EPA/600/D-84/243;
Stock Number PB85-110013
Additional Subjects Booms(Equipment) ; Water pollution control ; Standards ; Performance evaluation ; Tests ; Design criteria ; Hazardous materials ; Oil spills ; Oil retention booms ; Procedures
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
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Status
NTIS  PB85-110013 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 24p
Abstract
The OHMSETT Interagency Technical Committee (OTIC) sponsored a combined series of in-tank and open-water tests of five booms that cover a wide range of sizes and design parameters. The tests were conducted at the United States Environmental Protection Agency's OHMSETT facility and in Sandy Hook Bay between November 1983 and May 1984. The in-tank tests measured the oil-holding performance of the boom; the open-water tests demonstrated the wave conformance and survivability. The objective was a correlation between the two sets of data. There were five in-tank tests for each boom using a standardized test matrix for oil-holding ability. Wave conformance and endurance were observed under controlled conditions. The results of this testing compared favorably with past tests performed in the tank. The five booms were deployed in the bay from 14 to 27 days, depending on the weather, and were videotaped to document their approximate sea-state limits. The wave conformance of the 500-ft booms deployed in the bay was similar to the conformance of the 100-ft lengths used in the tank, but lack of conformance was more obvious in the bay tests. The in-tank endurance tests did not correlate as well as expected with the open-water testing. Additional testing to obtain both waveform and boom motion data is scheduled for the fall of 1984. These tests are designed to determine the minimum instrumentation and analysis needed to obtain acceptable measurements of boom response in irregular seas.