Reference method for measuring emissions of nitrogen oxides from stationary sources: chapter 8


8 Procedure

8.1 Sampling

Note 1 - The end 6 mm of the male T24/40 standard taper joint is not lubricated, to minimize contact of the gas sample with stopcock grease during absorption.

8.2 Sample Recovery

Note 2 - If the sample is expected to have a high concentration of oxides of nitrogen, transfer It to a 50-ml volumetric flask instead of the evaporating dish, and dilute to the mark with water. Select a suitable aliquot and pipet it into a 200-ml evaporating dish. Likewise, dilute 25.0 ml of unused absorbing solution to 50 ml and pipet an aliquot equal to that of the sample into a 200-ml evaporating dish for a blank.

Note 3 - To save time a 15-ml aliquot of the used absorbing solution may be pipetted into the evaporating dish, rather than quantitatively transferring the whole solution. This is permissible if the concentration of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) is high enough, and if the evacuation of the flask prior to admitting the sample was to the incipient or flash boiling point of the unused absorbing solution. Evacuation up to I minute after flash boiling appears to result in about a 1-percent decrease in the volume of the solution.

Note 4 - If it is necessary to reuse the sampling flask immediately or to ship the used absorbing solution back to a laboratory for analysis, the entire used absorbing solution or a 15-ml aliquot may be quantitatively transferred to a leak-free bottle until ready for analysis.

Figure 2. NOx Data sheet

equation 1 (See long description below)
Description of Figure 2 - Equation

The corrected volume of sample gas, Vc, in millilitres, is equal to 0.392 multiplied by the difference between the volume of sample collection flask, Vf, in millilitres, and the volume of absorbing solution used, Va, in millilitres. The result is then multiplied by the difference between the final and initial pressure to temperature ratio, where the final pressure is the absolute pressure in the flask after absorption period, Pf, in millimetres of mercury, the final temperature is the final absolute temperature of flask after absorption period, Tf in degrees Kelvin, the initial pressure is the initial absolute pressure in flask prior to sampling, in millimetres mercury and the initial temperature is the initial absolute temperature of flask prior to sampling in degrees Kelvin.

Sample Number
Date and Time
Volume of Flask
Vf ml
Volume of Absorbing Solution
Va ml
Initial Absolute Pressure
Pf , mm Hg
Initial Temperature
Ti , °K
Final Absolute Pressure
Pf , mm Hg
Final Temperature
Tf , °K
Corrected Volume Vc ml
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 

8.3 Analysis

Note 5 - The use of the same grade of filter paper should be adhered to in preparing the calibration curves and running the samples. It has been found that some yellow colour is retained on the paper when filtering more concentrated samples. This factor must be taken into account by using the same type of filter paper throughout, or by continuing to wash until no colour is retained in any case. Alternatively, the ammoniacal solutions may be centrifuged, instead of filtered, after dilution to 50 ml.

Note 6 - The calibration curves must not be assumed to be usable over any protracted length of time. It is suggested that standards be run along with the samples each time a set is run, or at least every few days if samples are being run daily.

Page details

Date modified: