Leland, regarding costs. I have had two scenarios described to me, one where 
the sample device is provided and I take the sample (therefore up to me to make 
that representative) and one where a technician comes in to collect the sample. 
I believe the $3000 applies to the first case ... ie. sampling is an additional 
cost.

If you are referring to on-line or at-line GS-MS or Gel chromatography I am 
interested to hear about experiences with these techniques. Our plant operators 
are not qualified instrument techs or lab techs ... which means at best the 
devices would get a check over on a monthly basis during scheduled plant visits.

My interest in the bag filter was with respect to particulates. This relates to 
dioxin in that they tend to be adsorbed onto the particulates (although perhaps 
more so at <300 deg C than 600 deg C), so it is one way to remove dioxins and 
their precursors if they are present. Some plants I understand actually inject 
fine carbon into their flue gas for this very purpose.

Kevin, on your comments about Chlorine and copper, I have been maintaining a 
watching brief for some time on the topic and from what I understand Chlorine 
levels are in fact poorly correlated with Dioxin emissions, arguably because 
the chlorine levels in most feedstocks, even at ppm levels are many many times 
the quantity needed to make the tiny amounts of Dioxins that regulators are 
checking for.  I read a very good review of the science just last week. If 
anyone wants the reference I could dig it out next week. The review of a looked 
critically at a variety of data on Dioxin formation and control. My 
interpretation of the their conclusions is that Dioxin emissions from 
pyrolysis, gasification and combustion processes are:

(a) Very poorly correlated with Chlorine levels, with the exception of a few 
industrial chemicals (not biomass)

(b) Strongly correlated to completion of combustion and the residence time of 
flue gases between 200 - 400 deg C (the desired residence times in this range 
were less than 1.6 seconds ...which perhaps does not bode well for torrefaction 
! ... and hot running electrostatic precipitators)

(c) Catalysed by copper and copper compounds .. which in turn are inhibited by 
the presence of sulphur.

(d) Sometimes dictated by the dioxin content of the incoming feedstock rather 
than formation in the process

If anyone has done Dioxin measurements on flue gases from thermal processing of 
biomass I certainly would be interested in their experiences.

Regards,

James

------------------------------
Date: Sat, 28 Jun 2014 05:50:23 -0400 (EDT)
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Gasification] Clean Air Regulation requirements imposed
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

 James,
        The price you stated for a dioxin test is just the analysis and does 
not include the technician's travel time, set up time and sampling time, per US 
costs.?
        There is a method of on-stream continuous measurement that will give 
analysis of all of the compounds presented in the standard you referenced that 
will also include fixed gases to almost any molecular weight.?
        I can't see how any bag or filter can be used to clean the gas.?
        
Sincerely,
Leland T. "Tom" Taylor
Thermogenics Inc.?


Date: Sat, 28 Jun 2014 09:22:55 -0300
From: "Kevin" <[email protected]>
To: "Discussion of biomass pyrolysis and gasification"
        <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Gasification] Clean Air Regulation requirements imposed
Message-ID: <CE1F1C69726943FCAC3E73C36F829823@usera594fda0bf>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
        reply-type=original

Dear James

It is my understanding that if Chlorine is present in a "biomass pyrolysis 
situation", the presence of dioxins is virtually guaranteed.

For example, if yak or cattle dung, chicken or feedlot manure, or salt water 
driftwood are pyrolysed or partially burned, there will be dioxins in the 
resulting pyrolysis gases or smoke.

QUANTITATIVE testing for dioxins could be very expensive, as you suggest. 
However, QUALITATIVE testing can be very low cost. Simply heat a copper wire 
red hot in the presence of the gas being tested for dioxins, when chlorine 
gas or chlorofluorocarbon refrigerants are known to be absent. If dioxins 
are present, the flame turns green or blue-green.

Best wishes,

Kevin


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