Airborne Particulate Emissions from a Chromic Acid Anodizing Process Tank
Open Access
- 7 March 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association
- Vol. 42 (3) , 303-308
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10473289.1992.10466994
Abstract
Particulate mass concentration, particle size distribution, and particle chemical composition measurements have been conducted on the gases exhausting from a chromic acid anodizing process tank. Particle mass concentrations in the 200 to 20,000 μg/m3 range were measured using open-faced filters (47 mm diameter) adjacent to the process tank liquid and with closed filters (90 mm diameter) in the exhaust duct. Particle size distributions, measured using University of Washington Mark 3 and Mark 20 Cascade Impactors, showed the particle aerodynamic mass median diameter was about 3 microns. Chemical analysis of the particle samples obtained by the Modified EPA Method 5 sampling train, the Mark 20 UW Cascade Impactors, and by the 47 mm and 90 mm diameter filters showed Cr+6 concentrations in the 20 to 1,500 μg/m3 range with over 99 percent of the chromium in particles larger than 1.0 microns diameter. An integrating nephelometer was used to measure the light scattering coefficient of the exhaust gases upstream of the wet scrubber. The light scattering coefficient increased by a factor of about 2–3 over the background level during the 40 minute time period while a part was being anodized. The bscat values ranged from 3 × 10−5 to 3 × 10−4 meters−1 for the aerosol particles less than about 6 microns aerodynamic diameter.Keywords
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