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CHAPTER 14 Plume Dispersion. Objectives:. Assess environmental impact of an emission source in terms of legislated standards for:. Toxicity, and Odour. In Ontario this constitutes regulation 419/05:. http:www.rwdi.com/regulation419/. Pg. 176 course notes.
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CHAPTER 14Plume Dispersion Objectives: Assess environmental impact of an emission source in terms of legislated standards for: • Toxicity, and • Odour
In Ontario this constitutes regulation 419/05: http:www.rwdi.com/regulation419/ Pg. 176 course notes
Our task is to estimate the impact of an emission source from an industrial plant:
Plume dispersion occurs in the y- and z-directions Plume is convected by the wind in the x-direction Z-axis starts from ground level
Turbulent dispersion: y-direction: z-direction: Where sy and sz are dispersion parameters that must be estimated
Recall from our treatment of particle diffusion: where Dis the particle diffusivity Pg. 49-50 course notes
Diffusion mechanisms: • Solute (gas or liquid) diffusion occurs by random molecular motion. • Particle diffusion occurs by random Brownian motion. • Plume dispersion occurs by random turbulent motion.
Ground-level concentrations will depend on … Wind … Wind rose shows average direction and magnitude of the wind vector Pg. 178 course notes
Atmospheric stability … Dry adiabatic lapse rate (stable, neutral atmosphere) Natural balance between hydrostatic head, g dA dZ, and pressure forces Pg. 179 course notes
Super-adiabatic lapse rate: A “buoyant” atmosphere Pg. 180 course notes
Sub-adiabatic lapse rate: Pg. 180 course notes
The Gaussian plume model: The concentration of material downwind in the x-direction varies as the inverse of the local transport velocity, i.e., A Gaussian type distribution is used in the y-direction:
If we choose The distribution will provide an integrated concentration of unity across the transverse cross-section … starting to look like a normal distribution!
Z- direction requires special treatment … When the “edge” of the plume reaches the ground … we assume perfect “reflection”!
(z - H) term accounts for the above ground contribution (z + H) term accounts for the imaginary source below ground
Final form of the Gaussian plume model: • Product of the y- and z-direction distributions • Q is the emission rate in mass per unit time
Variation of C with x is contained in the behaviour of y and z with downstream position, x, from the emission source.
Stability classes A - F Table 1-14 pg. 186
Mathematical models for sz • for class C, and • piecewise (in x) for other different classes
But … Pg. 188 course notes