Air pollutant concentrations

Air pollutant concentrations, as measured or as calculated by air pollution dispersion modeling,[1] must often be converted or corrected to be expressed as required by the regulations issued by various governmental agencies. Regulations that define and limit the concentration of pollutants in the ambient air or in gaseous emissions to the ambient air are issued by various national and state (or provincial) environmental protection and occupational health and safety agencies.

Such regulations involve a number of different expressions of concentration. Some express the concentrations as ppmv (parts per million by volume) and some express the concentrations as mg/m3 (milligrams per cubic meter), while others require adjusting or correcting the concentrations to reference conditions of moisture content, oxygen content or carbon dioxide content. This article presents methods for converting concentrations from ppmv to mg/m3 (and vice versa) and for correcting the concentrations to the required reference conditions.

All of the concentrations and concentration corrections in this article apply only to air and other gases. They are not applicable for liquids.

Carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphere if half of global-warming emissions[2][3] are not absorbed.
(NASA simulation; 9 November 2015)
Nitrogen dioxide 2014 - global air quality levels
(released 14 December 2015).[4]

Converting air pollutant concentrations

The conversion equations depend on the temperature at which the conversion is wanted (usually about 20 to 25 °C). At an ambient sea level atmospheric pressure of 1 atm (101.325 kPa or 1.01325 bar), the general equation is:

\mathrm {ppmv} =\mathrm {mg} /\mathrm {m} ^{3}\cdot {\frac {(0.08205\cdot T)}{M}}

and for the reverse conversion:

\mathrm {mg} /\mathrm {m} ^{3}=\mathrm {ppmv} \cdot {\frac {M}{(0.08205\cdot T)}}
where:  
mg/m3 = milligrams of pollutant per cubic meter of air at sea level atmospheric pressure and T
ppmv = air pollutant concentration, in parts per million by volume
T = ambient temperature in K = 273. + °C
0.08205 = Universal gas constant in atm·m3/(kmol·K)
M = molecular mass (or molecular weight) of the air pollutant

Notes:

Correcting concentrations for altitude

Air pollutant concentrations expressed as mass per unit volume of atmospheric air (e.g., mg/m3, µg/m3, etc.) at sea level will decrease with increasing altitude. The concentration decrease is directly proportional to the pressure decrease with increasing altitude. Some governmental regulatory jurisdictions require industrial sources of air pollution to comply with sea level standards corrected for altitude. In other words, industrial air pollution sources located at altitudes well above sea level must comply with significantly more stringent air quality standards than sources located at sea level (since it is more difficult to comply with lower standards). For example, New Mexico's Department of the Environment has a regulation with such a requirement.[5][6]

The change of atmospheric pressure with altitude (<20 km) can be obtained from this equation:[7]

P_{\mathrm {h} }=P\,\cdot {\bigg (}{\frac {288-6.5h}{288}}{\bigg )}^{5.2558}

Given an air pollutant concentration at sea-level atmospheric pressure, the concentration at higher altitudes can be obtained from this equation:

C_{\mathrm {h} }=C\,\cdot {\bigg (}{\frac {288-6.5h}{288}}{\bigg )}^{5.2558}
where:  
h = altitude, in km
P = atmospheric pressure at sea level
Ph = atmospheric pressure at altitude h
C
 
= Air pollutant concentration, in mass per unit volume at sea level atmospheric pressure and specified temperature T
Ch = Concentration, in mass per unit volume at altitude h and specified temperature T

As an example, given an air pollutant concentration of 260 mg/m3 at sea level, calculate the equivalent pollutant concentration at an altitude of 2800 meters:

Ch = 260 × [ { 288 - (6.5)(2.8) } / 288] 5.2558 = 260 × 0.71 = 185 mg/m3

Note:

Correcting concentrations for reference conditions

Many environmental protection agencies have issued regulations that limit the concentration of pollutants in gaseous emissions and define the reference conditions applicable to those concentration limits. For example, such a regulation might limit the concentration of NOx to 55 ppmv in a dry combustion exhaust gas (at a specified reference temperature and pressure) corrected to 3 volume percent O2 in the dry gas. As another example, a regulation might limit the concentration of total particulate matter to 200 mg/m3 of an emitted gas (at a specified reference temperature and pressure) corrected to a dry basis and further corrected to 12 volume percent CO2 in the dry gas.

Environmental agencies in the USA often use the terms "dscf" or "scfd" to denote a "standard" cubic foot of dry gas. Likewise, they often use the terms "dscm" or "scmd" to denote a "standard" cubic meter of gas. Since there is no universally accepted set of "standard" temperature and pressure, such usage can be and is very confusing. It is strongly recommended that the reference temperature and pressure always be clearly specified when stating gas volumes or gas flow rates.

Correcting to a dry basis

If a gaseous emission sample is analyzed and found to contain water vapor and a pollutant concentration of say 40 ppmv, then 40 ppmv should be designated as the "wet basis" pollutant concentration. The following equation can be used to correct the measured "wet basis" concentration to a "dry basis" concentration:

C_{\mathrm {dry\,basis} }={\frac {C_{\mathrm {wet\,basis} }}{1-w}}
where:  
C = Concentration of the air pollutant in the emitted gas
w = fraction of the emitted exhaust gas, by volume, which is water vapor

As an example, a wet basis concentration of 40 ppmv in a gas having 10 volume percent water vapor would have a:

Cdry basis = 40 ÷ ( 1 - 0.10 ) = 44.4 ppmv.

Correcting to a reference oxygen content

The following equation can be used to correct a measured pollutant concentration in a dry emitted gas with a measured O2 content to an equivalent pollutant concentration in a dry emitted gas with a specified reference amount of O2:[8]

C_{\mathrm {r} }=C_{\mathrm {m} }\cdot {\frac {(20.9-\mathrm {reference\,volume\,\%\,O_{2}} )}{(20.9-\mathrm {measured\,volume\,\%\,O_{2}} )}}
where:  
Cr = corrected concentration of a dry gas with a specified reference volume % O2
Cm = measured concentration in a dry gas having a measured volume % O2

As an example, a measured NOx concentration of 45 ppmv in a dry gas having 5 volume % O2 is:

45 × ( 20.9 - 3 ) ÷ ( 20.9 - 5 ) = 50.7 ppmv of NOx

when corrected to a dry gas having a specified reference O2 content of 3 volume %.

Note:

Correcting to a reference carbon dioxide content

The following equation can be used to correct a measured pollutant concentration in an emitted gas (containing a measured CO2 content) to an equivalent pollutant concentration in an emitted gas containing a specified reference amount of CO2:[8]

C_{\mathrm {r} }=C_{\mathrm {m} }\cdot {\frac {(\mathrm {reference\,volume\,\%\,CO_{2}} )}{(\mathrm {measured\,volume\,\%\,CO_{2}} )}}
where:  
Cr = corrected concentration of a dry gas having a specified reference volume % CO2
Cm = measured concentration of a dry gas having a measured volume % CO2

As an example, a measured particulates concentration of 200 mg/m3 in a dry gas that has a measured 8 volume % CO2 is:

200 × ( 12 ÷ 8 ) = 300 mg/m3

when corrected to a dry gas having a specified reference CO2 content of 12 volume %.

References

This article incorporates material from the Citizendium article "Air pollutant concentrations", which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License but not under the GFDL.

  1. M.R. Beychok (2005). Fundamentals of Stack Gas Dispersion (4th ed.). Self-published. ISBN 0-9644588-0-2.
  2. St. Fleur, Nicholas (10 November 2015). "Atmospheric Greenhouse Gas Levels Hit Record, Report Says". New York Times. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  3. Ritter, Karl (9 November 2015). "UK: In 1st, global temps average could be 1 degree C higher". AP News. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  4. Cole, Steve; Gray, Ellen (14 December 2015). "New NASA Satellite Maps Show Human Fingerprint on Global Air Quality". NASA. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
  5. Draft Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for Stockpile Stewardship and Management(See section 03.05 of the EIS which involves the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico)
  6. Air Quality Impact Analysis (Developed for the United States Bureau of Land Management, Socorro Field Office, New Mexico)
  7. United States Department of Defense MIL-STD-810F, 1 January 2000. (See: Annex A, page 520.2A5 )
  8. 1 2 David A. Lewandowski (1999). Design of Thermal Oxidation Systems for Volatile Organic Compounds (1st ed.). CRC Press. ISBN 1-56670-410-3.
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