4.7 Article

VOCs emission rate estimate for complicated industrial area source using an inverse-dispersion calculation method: A case study on a petroleum refinery in Northern China

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 218, Issue -, Pages 681-688

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2016.07.062

Keywords

VOCs; Emission rate; Inverse-dispersion calculation method; Industrial area source; Petroleum refinery

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [51108006, 51478017]
  2. China's State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Sources and Control of Air Pollution Complex

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This study aimed to apply an inverse-dispersion calculation method (IDM) to estimate the emission rate of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) for the complicated industrial area sources, through a case study on a petroleum refinery in Northern China. The IDM was composed of on-site monitoring of ambient VOCs concentrations and meteorological parameters around the source, calculation of the relationship coefficient gamma between the source's emission rate and the ambient VOCs concentration by the ISC3 model, and estimation of the actual VOCs emission rate from the source. Targeting the studied refinery, 10 tests and 8 tests were respectively conducted in March and in June of 2014. The monitoring showed large differences in VOCs concentrations between background and downwind receptors, reaching 59.7 ppbv in March and 248.6 ppbv in June, on average. The VOCs increases at receptors mainly consisted of ethane (3.1%-22.6%), propane (3.8%-11.3%), isobutane (8.5%-10.2%), n-butane (9.9%-13.2%), isopentane (6.1% 12.9%), n-pentane (5.1%-9.7%), propylene (6.1-11.1%) and 1-butylene (1.6%-5.4%). The chemical composition of the VOCs increases in this field monitoring was similar to that of VOCs emissions from China's refineries reported, which revealed that the ambient VOCs increases were predominantly contributed by this refinery. So, we used the ISC3 model to create the relationship coefficient gamma for each receptor of each test. In result, the monthly VOCs emissions from this refinery were calculated to be 183.5 +/- 89.0 ton in March and 538.3 +/- 281.0 ton in June. The estimate in June was greatly higher than in March, chiefly because the higher environmental temperature in summer produced more VOCs emissions from evaporation and fugitive process of the refinery. Finally, the VOCs emission factors (g VOCs/kg crude oil refined) of 0.73 +/- 0.34 (in March) and 2.15 +/- 1.12 (in June) were deduced for this refinery, being in the same order with previous direct-measurement results (1.08-2.65 g VOCs/kg crude oil refined). An inverse-dispersion calculation method was applied to estimate VOCs emission rate for a petroleum refinery, being 183.5 ton/month (March) and 538.3 ton/month (June). (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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