Tuesday, January 6, 2015: 2:45 PM
Salon D (Marriott Rivercenter Hotel)
A cotton ginning industry-supported project was initiated in 2008 to update the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Compilation of Air Pollution Emission Factors (AP-42) to include PM10 emission factors. This study develops emission factors from the PM10 emission factor data collected from the industry supported project (hereafter referred to as “National Study”) for 17 cotton gin systems and rates their quality using EPA’s new Emission Factor Development Procedures (published August 2013). Stack emissions were collected using Method 201a with a PM10 cyclone only; Method 201a with a PM10 and PM2.5 cyclone; and Method 17 in combination with particle size analysis. Unrepresentative test runs were removed from the National Study dataset if gin operation was erratic, laboratory errors occurred, or if indicated to be an outlier by either of two outlier tests. The remaining test runs were assessed for quality using the EPA’s Test Quality Rating Tool and assigned Individual Test Ratings (ITRs). ITRs were also calculated for source tests from the current AP-42. The test runs and ITRs were averaged for each method used at a gin. The averages were used to develop emission factors and their representativeness ratings. This resulted in seven “moderately” and ten “highly” representative emission factors, and a range of 0.017 (mote trash) to 0.240 lbs. of PM10 per bale (combined lint cleaning). These factors greatly improve the quality of the existing AP-42 PM10 emissions factors, which were all rated “D” (below average).