Single point aerosol sampling: Evaluation of mixing and probe performance in a nuclear stack
Author(s) -
John Rodgers,
Charles Fairchild,
Gerry O. Wood,
Carlos Ortiz,
Arnold Muyshondt,
Andrew R. McFarland
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/28289
Subject(s) - aerosol , stack (abstract data type) , sampling (signal processing) , inlet , environmental science , instrumentation (computer programming) , tracer , transmission (telecommunications) , analytical chemistry (journal) , nuclear engineering , chemistry , meteorology , nuclear physics , physics , optics , engineering , chromatography , computer science , mechanical engineering , detector , operating system , electrical engineering , programming language
Alternative Reference Methodologies (ARMS) have been developed for sampling of radionuclide; from stacks and ducts that differ from the methods required by the US EPA. The EPA methods are prescriptive in selection of sampling locations and in design of sampling probes whereas the alternative methods are performance driven. Tests were conducted in a stack at Los Alamos National Laboratory to demonstrate the efficacy of the ARMS. Coefficients of variation of the velocity tracer gas, and aerosol particle profiles were determined at three sampling locations. Results showed numerical criteria placed upon the coefficients of variation by the ARMs were met at sampling stations located 9 and 14 stack diameters from flow entrance, but not at a location that is 1.5 diameters downstream from the inlet. Experiments were conducted to characterize the transmission of 10 {mu}m aerodynamic equivalent diameter liquid aerosol particles through three types of sampling probes. The transmission ratio (ratio of aerosol concentration at the probe exit plane to the concentration in the free stream) was 107% for a 113 L/min (4-cfm) an isokinetic shrouded probe, but only 20% for an isokinetic probe that follows the EPA requirements. A specially designed isokinetic probe showed a transmission ratio of 63%. The shrouded probe performance would conform to the ARM criteria; however, the isokinetic probes would not
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