Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 21 OF 95

Main Title Development of the 1980 NAPAP (National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program) Emissions Inventory: Area Sources-Spring Sunday, Product Y (Version 5.3).
Author Mobley, J. D. ; Zelmanowitz, S. ;
CORP Author Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC. Air and Energy Engineering Research Lab.
Year Published 1980
Report Number EPA/600/7-86/057Y; EPA/DF/MT-88/025;
Stock Number PB88-137369
Additional Subjects Data file ; Air pollution ; Exhaust emissions ; Electric utilities ; Inventories ; Magnetic tapes ; Sources ; Precipitation(Meteorology) ; Sulfur dioxide ; Nitrogen oxides ; Acid rain ; National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program ; Emissions inventory ; Area sources
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
NTIS  PB88-137369 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation mag tape
Abstract
The 1980 NAPAP Emissions Inventory 5.2 area source emissions data for the 48 contiguous United States and Canada (from 50 degrees to 125 degrees W. Longitude and from 25 degrees to 60 degrees N. Latitude) are contained in the data file. Temporally, spatially, and species-resolved emissions of 11 pollutants (SO2, SO4, NOx, Pb, CO, HCl, HF, NH3, TSP, VOC, and total hydrocarbons) for a typical spring weekday for 88 source categories from 3,070 U.S. counties and 150 source categories from 10 Canadian provinces are present. The data file (Product Y) is one of a series of 1980 NAPAP Emissions Inventory products. A report ('Development of the 1980 NAPAP Emissions Inventory') documenting the contents of the data file is available as Product A. Other emissions inventory products include data files containing U.S. and Canadian annual point and area source emissions (Version 5.0) and temporally, spatially, and species-resolved emissions for a typical weekday, Saturday, and Sunday in each season (Versions 5.2 and 5.3). Version 5.2 contains total hydrocarbons (THC) speciated into 28 photochemical reactivity classes, while THC in Version 5.3 are speciated into 10 classes based on carbon bond IV chemistry.