Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 3 OF 8

Main Title Preliminary Emissions Assessment of Conventional Stationary Combustion Systems. Volume II.
Author Surprenant, Norman ; Hall, Robert ; Slater, Steven ; Susa, Thomas ; Sussman., Martin ;
CORP Author GCA Corp., Bedford, Mass. GCA Technology Div.;Industrial Environmental Research Lab., Research Triangle Park, N.C.
Year Published 1976
Report Number GCA-TR-75-26-G-Vol-2; EPA-68-02-1316; EPA-ROAP-AAU-002; EPA/600/2-76/046b;
Stock Number PB-252 175
Additional Subjects Solid waste disposal ; Combustion products ; Air pollution ; Water pollution ; Environmental impacts ; Space heating ; Electric power generation ; Boilers ; Fuel consumption ; Thermal pollution ; Noise pollution ; Coal ; Earthfills ; Flue gases ; Natural gases ; Oils ; Industrial wastes ; Incinerators ; Ashes ; Materials handling ; Particles ; Sulfur oxides ; Nitrogen oxides ; Carbon monoxide ; Trace elements ; Air pollution control ; Assessments ; Internal combustion engine ; Residential buildings ; Stationary sources
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
NTIS  PB-252 175 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 557p
Abstract
The report gives results of a preliminary emissions assessment of the air, water, and solid waste pollutants produced by conventional stationary combustion systems. It gives results in four principal categories: utilities (electric generation), industrial (steam generation, space heating, and stationary engines), commercial/institutional (space heating and stationary engines), and residential (space heating). For each principal combustion system category, it gives: process types and operating efficiencies, fuel consumption, pollutant sources and characteristics, major research and development trends, fuel consumption trends, and technical areas where emission data are incomplete or unreliable. It also gives the pollutant emissions from applicable unit operations for each of 56 source classifications, using a uniform combustion source classification system. It identifies major gaps in available data regarding the population and capacity of combustion systems, application of control measures, fuel composition, and other parameters which significantly influence pollutant characteristics and emission rates.