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RECORD NUMBER: 36 OF 124

Main Title Evaluation of Three Oil Spill Laboratory Dispersant Effectiveness Tests.
Author Sullivan, D. ; Farlow, J. ; Sahatjian, K. A. ;
CORP Author Coast Guard, Washington, DC. ;American Petroleum Inst., Washington, DC.;Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, OH. Risk Reduction Engineering Lab.
Publisher 1993
Year Published 1993
Report Number EPA-68-C9-0062; EPA/600/A-93/102;
Stock Number PB93-191377
Additional Subjects Oil spills ; Dispersants ; Performance evaluation ; Chemicals ; Test methods ; Reliability ; US EPA ; Toxicity ; Canada ; France ; Comparison ; Standards ; Cost effectiveness ; Reprints ;
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
NTIS  PB93-191377 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 9p
Abstract
EPA evaluated three laboratory methods: the Revised Standard Dispersant Effectiveness Test currently used (and currently required by regulation) in the United States, the Swirling Flask Test (developed by Environment Canada), and the IFP-Dilution Test (used in France and other European countries). Six test oils and three dispersants were evaluated; dispersants were applied to the oil at an average 1:10 ratio (dispersant to oil) for each of the three laboratory methods. A screening criterion was established that required a combination that gave at least 20 percent effectiveness results. The selected combination turned out to be Prudhoe Bay crude oil (an EPA-American Petroleum Institute Standard Reference Oil) and the dispersant Corexit 9527. EPA's evaluation concluded that the three tests give similar precision results, but that the Swirling Flask Test was fastest, cheapest, simplest, and required least operator skill.