Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 10 OF 19

Main Title Environmental assessment of stationary source NOx control technologies : final report /
Author Waterland, L. R. ; Lim, K. J. ; Higginbotham, E. B. ; Evans, R. M. ; Mason, H. B.
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
Waterland, L. R.
CORP Author Acurex Corp., Mountain View, CA.;Industrial Environmental Research Lab., Research Triangle Park, NC.
Publisher U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory,
Year Published 1982
Report Number EPA/600/7-82/034; 80-57/EE; EPA-68-02-2160; ACUREX-7242
Stock Number PB82-249350
Subjects Nitrogen oxides--Measurement ; Combustion gases--Pollution ; Air--Pollution
Additional Subjects Air pollution control ; Nitrogen oxides ; Assessments ; Technology ; Industrial wastes ; Combustion products ; Revisions ; Performance evaluation ; Regulations ; Substitutes ; Residential buildings ; Gas turbines ; Boilers ; Stationary sources
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
NTIS  PB82-249350 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 339 pages : illustrations, tables, charts ; 28 cm
Abstract
The report summarizes results of a 3-year evaluation of combustion modification controls for emissions of NOx and other pollutants from stationary combustion sources. Results include field tests of gaseous, liquid, and solid effluents from seven stationary sources; estimates of environmental effects of using combustion modification control; evaluation of NOx control reduction effectiveness, capital and operating costs, and operational impact for several levels of control; projection of control technology needs to the year 2000 for several scenarios of energy growth and environmental regulations; and inventories of nationwide stationary source emissions for major pollutants and emission projections to the year 2000. Three utility boilers, two industrial boilers, a gas turbine, and a low-emission residential heating system were tested. The utility boiler tests on two coal-fired systems and one oil-fired boiler, showed NOx emission level reductions of 30-43% using various combustion modification techniques; however, the same tests showed that other emissions were essentially unchanged. Similarly, tests on the other types of equipment showed that modifications to reduce NOx left emissions of other species unchanged or lower. In some cases, where emissions were increased, the environmental effect was counter-balanced by the beneficial effects of NO reduction.
Notes
"May 1982." Includes bibliographical references. Microfiche.