(a) Each owner or
operator subject to the provisions of this subchapter shall comply with the
test methods and procedures requirements provided in this section.
(b) When a closed-vent system is tested for
compliance with no detectable emissions, as required in subsection
11-265-1033(k), the test shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) Monitoring shall comply with Reference
Method 21 in 40 CFR Part
60 (1998).
(2) The detection instrument shall meet the
performance criteria of Reference Method 21.
(3) The instrument shall be calibrated before
use on each day of its use by the procedures specified in Reference Method
21.
(4) Calibration gases shall be:
(i) Zero air (less than ten ppm of
hydrocarbon in air).
(ii) A mixture
of methane or n-hexane and air at a concentration of approximately, but less
than, ten-thousand ppm methane or n-hexane.
(5) The background level shall be determined
as set forth in Reference Method 21.
(6) The instrument probe shall be traversed
around all potential leak interfaces as close to the interface as possible as
described in Reference Method 21.
(7) The arithmetic difference between the
maximum concentration indicated by the instrument and the background level is
compared with five-hundred ppm for determining compliance.
(c) Performance tests to determine compliance
with subsection
11-265-1032(a) and with the total organic compound
concentration limit of subsection
11-265-1033(c) shall comply with the
following:
(1) Performance tests to determine
total organic compound concentrations and mass flow rates entering and exiting
control devices shall be conducted and data reduced in accordance with the
following reference methods and calculation procedures:
(i) Method 2 in 40 CFR Part
60(1998) for
velocity and volumetric flow rate.
(ii) Method 18 in 40 CFR Part
60(1998) for
organic content.
(iii) Each
performance test shall consist of three separate runs; each run conducted for
at least one hour under the conditions that exist when the hazardous waste
management unit is operating at the highest load or capacity level reasonably
expected to occur. For the purpose of determining total organic compound
concentrations and mass flow rates, the average of results of all runs shall
apply. The average shall be computed on a time-weighted basis.
(iv) Total organic mass flow rates shall be
determined by the following equation:
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where:
Eh=Total organic mass flow rate,
kg/h;
Qsd=Volumetric flow rate of gases
entering or exiting control device, as determined by Method 2, dscm/h;
n=Number of organic compounds in the vent gas;
Ci=Organic concentration in ppm,
dry basis, of compound i in the vent gas, as determined by Method 18;
MWi=Molecular weight of organic
compound i in the vent gas, kg/kg-mol;
0.0416=Conversion factor for molar volume,
kg-mol/m3 (@ 293 K and 760 mm Hg);
10-6=Conversion from ppm,
ppm-1.
(v) The annual total organic emission rate
shall be determined by the following equation:
EA=(Eh)
(H)
where:
EA=Total organic mass emission
rate, kg/y;
Eh=Total organic mass flow rate for
the process vent, kg/h;
H=Total annual hours of operations for the affected unit,
h.
(vi) Total organic
emissions from all affected process vents at the facility shall be determined
by summing the hourly total organic mass emission rates
(Eh, as determined in subparagraph (c)(1)(iv)) and by
summing the annual total organic mass emission rates
(EA, as determined in subparagraph (c)(1)(v)) for all
affected process vents at the facility.
(2) The owner or operator shall record such
process information as may be necessary to determine the conditions of the
performance tests. Operations during periods of startup, shutdown, and
malfunction shall not constitute representative conditions for the purpose of a
performance test.
(3) The owner or
operator of an affected facility shall provide, or cause to be provided,
performance testing facilities as follows:
(i) Sampling ports adequate for the test
methods specified in paragraph (c)(1).
(ii) Safe sampling platform(s).
(iii) Safe access to sampling
platform(s).
(iv) Utilities for
sampling and testing equipment.
(4) For the purpose of making compliance
determinations, the time-weighted average of the results of the three runs
shall apply. In the event that a sample is accidentally lost or conditions
occur in which one of the three runs must be discontinued because of forced
shutdown, failure of an irreplaceable portion of the sample train, extreme
meteorological conditions, or other circumstances beyond the owner or
operator's control, compliance may, upon the director's approval, be determined
using the average of the results of the two other runs.
(d) To show that a process vent associated
with a hazardous waste distillation, fractionation, thin-film evaporation,
solvent extraction, or air or steam stripping operation is not subject to the
requirements of this subchapter, the owner or operator must make an initial
determination that the time-weighted, annual average total organic
concentration of the waste managed by the waste management unit is less than
ten ppmw using one of the following two methods:
(1) Direct measurement of the organic
concentration of the waste using the following procedures:
(i) The owner or operator must take a minimum
of four grab samples of waste for each waste stream managed in the affected
unit under process conditions expected to cause the maximum waste organic
concentration.
(ii) For waste
generated onsite, the grab samples must be collected at a point before the
waste is exposed to the atmosphere such as in an enclosed pipe or other closed
system that is used to transfer the waste after generation to the first
affected distillation fractionation, thin-film evaporation, solvent extraction,
or air or steam stripping operation. For waste generated offsite, the grab
samples must be collected at the inlet to the first waste management unit that
receives the waste provided the waste has been transferred to the facility in a
closed system such as a tank truck and the waste is not diluted or mixed with
other waste.
(iii) Each sample
shall be analyzed and the total organic concentration of the sample shall be
computed using Method 9060 or 8260 of SW-846 (incorporated by reference under
section
11-260-11).
(iv) The
arithmetic mean of the results of the analyses of the four samples shall apply
for each waste stream managed in the unit in determining the time-weighted,
annual average total organic concentration of the waste. The time-weighted
average is to be calculated using the annual quantity of each waste stream
processed and the mean organic concentration of each waste stream managed in
the unit.
(2) Using
knowledge of the waste to determine that its total organic concentration is
less than ten ppmw. Documentation of the waste determination is required.
Examples of documentation that shall be used to support a determination under
this provision include production process information documenting that no
organic compounds are used, information that the waste is generated by a
process that is identical to a process at the same or another facility that has
previously been demonstrated by direct measurement to generate a waste stream
having a total organic content less than ten ppmw, or prior speciation analysis
results on the same waste stream where it can also be documented that no
process changes have occurred since that analysis that could affect the waste
total organic concentration.
(e) The determination that distillation
fractionation, thin-film evaporation, solvent extraction, or air or steam
stripping operations manage hazardous wastes with time-weighted annual average
total organic concentrations less than ten ppmw shall be made as follows:
(1) By the effective date that the facility
becomes subject to the provisions of this subchapter or by the date when the
waste is first managed in a waste management unit, whichever is later;
and
(2) For continuously generated
waste, annually; or
(3) Whenever
there is a change in the waste being managed or a change in the process that
generates or treats the waste.
(f) When an owner or operator and the
director do not agree on whether a distillation, fractionation, thin-film
evaporation, solvent extraction, or air or steam stripping operation manages a
hazardous waste with organic concentrations of at least ten ppmw based on
knowledge of the waste, the procedures in Method 8260 of SW-846 (incorporated
by reference under section
11-260-11) may be used to resolve the
dispute.