Species correlation measurements in turbulent flare plumes: considerations for field measurements
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Published:2021-07-30
Issue:7
Volume:14
Page:5179-5197
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ISSN:1867-8548
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Container-title:Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Meas. Tech.
Author:
Seymour Scott P.ORCID, Johnson Matthew R.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Field measurement of flare emissions in turbulent flare plumes is an important
and complex challenge. Incomplete combustion from these processes results in
emissions of black carbon, unburnt fuels (methane), CO2, and other
pollutants. Many field measurement approaches necessarily assume that
combustion species are spatially and/or temporally correlated in the plume,
such that simple species ratios can be used to close a carbon balance to
calculate species emission factors and flare conversion efficiency. This study
examines the veracity of this assumption and the associated implications for
measurement uncertainty. A novel tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy
(TDLAS) system is used to measure the correlation between H2O and
black carbon (BC) volume fractions in the plumes of a vertical, turbulent,
non-premixed, buoyancy-driven lab-scale gas flare. Experiments reveal that
instantaneous, path-averaged concentrations of BC and H2O can vary
independently and are not necessarily well correlated over short time
intervals. The scatter in the BC/H2O ratio along a path through the
plume was well beyond that which could be attributed to measurement
uncertainty and was asymmetrically distributed about the mean. Consistent
with previous field observations, this positive skewness toward higher
BC/H2O ratios implies short, localized, and infrequent bursts of
high BC production that are not well correlated with H2O. This
demonstrates that the common assumption of fixed species ratios is not
universally valid, and measurements based on limited samples, short sampling
times, and/or limited spatial coverage of the plume could be subject to
potentially large added uncertainty. For BC emission measurements, the
positive skewness of the BC/H2O ratio also suggests that results
from small numbers of samples are more likely to be biased low. However, a
bootstrap analysis of the results shows how these issues can be avoided with
sufficient sample size and provides initial guidance for creating sampling
protocols for future field measurements using analogous path-averaged
techniques.
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Natural Resources Canada
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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