Title: Open Path Methods
1Open Path Methods
Albert J. Heber, Professor heber_at_purdue.edu
AgAirQuality.com
Agricultural and Biological Engineering Purdue
University
2Biocurtain at Laying House
Biocurtain over 3 fans
Lab
3Inside Biocurtain at Layer House
4NRC Report on Air Emissions
Emissions Global/Nat. Local Concern
NH3 Major Minor N-Dep/PM2.5
N2O Significant Insignificant Climate
NOx Significant Minor Haze/Health
CH4 Significant Insignificant Climate
VOCs Insignificant Minor Quality
H2S Insignificant Significant Quality
PM10 Insignificant Significant Haze
PM2.5 Insignificant Significant Health/Haze
Odor Insignificant Major Quality
5Comparing Open Path Sensors
Type of Sensor FTIR UV OPL
Detector cooling Cryocooler - -
Path Length, m 400 150-1000 2000
Mode Monostatic Bistatic Monostatic
Compounds NH3, VOC, CH4 NH3, H2S, Nox H2S or NH3
Scan frequency, Hz 1 1 4000
Detection Limits
Hydrogen sulfide Deuterium
ppm-m 10-30 0.4-5 6-25
ppb 75-600 2.8-33 3-120
Linear upper range
Ammonia Xenon
ppm-m 1.5 2 2
ppb 2-50 3-20 1-40
Linear upper range 903
Models BLS, TOM BLS, TOM BLS
6Type of Sensor FTIR UV OPL
Scanning Yes Yes ?
Reflectors -
200 m 30 cube Small retro
400 m 60 cube
1000 m 90 cube
Real-time quantification yes yes, w/ BLS yes
Capital cost 140K 20K-45K 30K
Short term costs none none none
Annual costs Repump cooler, replace retros New source None
Recalibration needs None Annually 7K laser/7 yr.
7FTIR with 48-m Closed Cell
- Advantages
- Measures greenhouse gases
- Measures ammonia MDLlt6 ppb, NO, NO2
- Measures dozens of other gases, SO2
- Real-time measurement
- Quick response limited by cell volume
- Disadvantages
- Expensive 75,000
- Heavy, non-portable
8Scanning FTIR - Tomography
- Layer house
- Horizontal scanning
- Vertical scanning
9Source Bruce Harris, U.S. EPA, 2004
10Source Bruce Harris, U.S. EPA, 2004
11Field Measurement of Air Pollutants Near Swine
Confined Animal Feeding Operations using UV DOAS
and FTIRC. D. Secrest (paper presented in 2000)
- Ambient ammonia concentrations 0.8 km from a
large swine facility with lagoons over a two week
period were 0 to 900 ppb. - An Iowa Study Group recommended that ambient
exposure to ammonia should not exceed 150 ppb. - The UV DOAS and FTIR were in good agreement.
- Open-path monitors combined with wind monitors
are powerful tools for comparing daytime and
nighttime pollutant concentrations, and for
determining the effect of wind speed on
concentration.
12- Area sources -gt diffuse plumes
- Open-path -gt entire plume length
- An array paths maps the plume
Source Bruce Harris, U.S. EPA, 2004
13OP-FTIR Measurement Pathsfor Path-Integrated
Optical Remote Sensing (Tomography)
Source Bruce Harris, U.S. EPA, 2004
14Controlled release simulation of an area source
under unstable air conditions worst case
Reconstructed plumes Actual release rate 1.7
g/s Calculated flux 1.2 g/s Measured s?
50.7 Pasquill-Gifford Stability A - Unstable
Height meters
Source Bruce Harris, U.S. EPA, 2004
15Controlled release simulation of an area source
under stable air conditions best case
Reconstructed plumes Actual release rate 1.7
g/s Calculated flux 1.5 g/s Measured s?
12.7 Pasquill-Gifford Stability C-D - Neutral
Source Bruce Harris, U.S. EPA, 2004
16FTIR References
- Harris, D. B., and E.L. Thompson, Jr. 1998.
Evaluation of ammonia emission from swine
operations in North Carolina. Proc. Emission
Inventory-Living in a Global Environment, VIP-88,
pp. 420-429. AWMA, Pittsburgh, PA. - Harris, D. B., E.L. Thompson, Jr., D.A.
Kirchgessner, J.W. Childers, M. Clayton, D.F.
Natschke, W.J. Phillips. 1999. Multi-pollutant
concentration mapping around a concentrated swine
production facility using open-path FTIR
spectrometry. Workshop on Atmospheric Nitrogen
Compounds II Emissions, Transport,
Transformation, Deposition and Assessment, NCSU,
Raleigh, NC, pp. 237-246. - Childers, J. W., E.L. Thompson, Jr., D.B. Harris,
D.A. Kirchgessner, M. Clayton, D.A. Natschke,
W.J. Phillips. 2001. Multi-pollutant measurements
around a concentrated swine production facility
using open-path spectrometry. Atm. Env. 35
1023-1936. - Childers, J. W., Thompson, E. L., Jr., Harris, D.
B., Kirchgessner, D. A., Clayton, M., Natschke,
D. A., Phillips, W. J. (2001) Application of
standardized quality control procedures to
open-path fourier transform infrared data
collected at a concentrated swine production
facility. Env. Science Tech. 351859-1866.
Source Bruce Harris, U.S. EPA, 2004
17FTIR References
- Childers, J. W., E.L. Thompson, Jr., D.B. Harris,
D.A. Kirchgessner, M. Clayton, D.A. Natschke,
W.J. Phillips. 2000. Comparison of an innovative
algorithm to classical least squares for
analyzing open-path fourier transform infrared
spectra collected at a concentrated swine
production facility. Appl.Spect. 56325-336. - Hashmonay, R. A., D.A. Natschke, K. Wagoner, D.B.
Harris, E.L. Thompson, Jr., M.G. Yost. 2001.
Field evaluation of a method for estimating
gaseous fluxes from area sources using open-path
fourier transform infrared. Env. Sci. Tech.
352309-2313. - Harris, D. B., E.L. Thompson, Jr., Vogel, C. A.,
Hashmonay, R. A., Natschke, D. A., Wagoner, K.
Yost, M.G. Innovative approach for measuring
ammonia and methane fluxes from a hog farm using
open-path fourier transform infrared
spectroscopy. 94th Annual Conf. of the AWMA,
VIP-102-CD, AWMA, Pittsburgh, PA 2001. - Hashmonay, R.A. and D.B. Harris. 2001.
Particulate matter measurements using open-path
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. 94th
Annual Conference of the Air Waste Management
Association, VIP-102-CD, AWMA, Pittsburgh, PA. - Harris, D.B., R.C. Shores, L.G. Jones. Ammonia
Emission Factors from Swine Finishing Operations.
Int. Emissions Inventory Conference, One
Atmosphere, One Inventory, Many Challenges.
www.epa.gov/ttn/chief/conferences/ei10/index.html.
Source Bruce Harris, U.S. EPA, 2004
18Wind
ponds
sheds
ponds
sheds
Source Lowry Harper USDA-ARS, 2004
19Wind
Source Lowry Harper USDA-ARS, 2004
Smeared plume
20Wind
Source Lowry Harper USDA-ARS, 2004
21Backward Lagrangian Stochastic (BLS) Dispersion
Models
- Backward Lagrangian Stochastic Modeling
- Introduced by Flesch, T.K., and J.D. Wilson.
1995. Backward-time Lagrangian stochastic
dispersion models and their application to
estimate gaseous emissions. J. Applied
Meteorology 341320-1332. - Utilizes point or line measurement
- Ultrasonic or cup anemometers
- Flexible and easy to use.
- Surface layer model. Locate lt 1 km.
- Commercial software available www.thunderbeachscie
ntific.com
22UV-DOAS
- Ultraviolet Differential Optical Absorption
Spectroscopy - 1-1000 ppb path length
- Fast scanning, compact, tunable
- EPA Equivalent Method for SO2, O3 and NO2.
- Also measures ammonia, benzene, toluene, xylenes,
styrene, Hg, HF, HNO2, HCHO - Continuous operation
- MDL for ammonia 2.8 to 5.8 ppb
Source Myers, J., T. Kelly, C. Lawrie, and K.
Riggs. 2000. ETV Technology Evaluation Report.
Opsis, Inc. AR-500 Ultraviolet Open-Path Monitor.
ETV Advanced Monitoring Systems Center, Battelle.
23EPA Lab for Ambient Measurements
TEOM
UV-DOAS
UV-DOAS
TEOM
UV-DOAS
1-min averaging and recording intervals
MET tower
24Collocated UVs
25Micromet Setup at Lagoons
FTIR Tomography
UV BLS
FTIR BLS
Source Bruce Harris, U.S. EPA, 2004
26Equipment Required per Team
- Two FTIR scanning systems with 20 retros
- Two UV systems
- Four computers for optical remote sensors
- One computer for data QAQC and analysis
- Two 3D ultrasonic anemometers (2 and 12 m)
- Complete weather station
- Two, 12-m towers for FTIR/UV systems
- One, 2 m tower for ultrasonic anemometer
- Software for computed tomography method
- Software for BLS method
- Van and trailer
27Thank you!
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