Hazardous waste sites and industrial facilities contain area sources of fugitive emissions. Emission rate measurements or estimates are necessary for air pathway assessments for these sources. Emission rate data can be useful for the design of emission control and remediation strategies as well as for predictive modeling for population exposure assessments. This paper describes the use of a direct emission measurement approach - the enclosure approach using an emission isolation flux chamber - to measure emission rates of various volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from contaminated soil and water. A variety of flux chamber equipment designs and operating procedures have been employed by various researchers. This paper contains a review of the design and operational variables that affect the accuracy and precision of the method. Guidance is given as to the optimum flux chamber design and operating conditions for various types of emission sources. Also presented is a generic quality control program that gives the minimum number of duplicate, blank, background, and repeat samples that should be performed. © 1992 Air & Waste Management Association.
CITATION STYLE
Eklund, B. (1992). Practical guidance for flux chamber measurements of fugitive volatile organic emission rates. Journal of the Air and Waste Management Association, 42(12), 1583–1591. https://doi.org/10.1080/10473289.1992.10467102
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