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EN 16841-2:2016

Current
Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

Ambient air - Determination of odour in ambient air by using field inspection - Part 2: Plume method
Published date

23-11-2016

European foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
4 Symbols and abbreviations
5 Principle of plume extent measurement
6 Coordinator, assessors and panel members
7 Planning of measurements
8 Measurement procedure
9 Quality requirements
10 Data recording, calculation and reporting
Annex A (informative) - Overview and interaction
        of existing odour measurement methods
Annex B (informative) - Uncertainty of the plume method
Annex C (informative) - Turbulence conditions
Annex D (informative) - Example stationary plume measurement
Annex E (informative) - Example dynamic plume measurement
Annex F (informative) - Calculation of the odour emission
        rate by reverse modelling - stationary plume
        measurement (example)
Annex G (informative) - Calculation of the odour emission
        rate by reverse modelling - dynamic plume
        measurement (example)
Bibliography

This part of the European Standard describes the plume method for determining the extent of recognizable odours from a specific source using direct observation in the field by human panel members under specific meteorological conditions.The plume method involves the determination of the presence or absence (YES/NO) of recognizable odours in and around the plume originating from a specific odorant emission source, for a specific emission situation and under specific meteorological conditions (specific wind direction, wind speed and boundary layer turbulence). The unit of measurement is the presence or absence of recognizable odours at a particular location downwind of a source. The extent of the plume is assessed as the transition of absence to presence of recognizable odour.The primary application of this standard is to provide a common basis for the determination of the odour plume extent in the member states of the European Union.The results are typically used to determine a plausible extent of potential exposure to recognizable odours, or to estimate the total emission rate based on the plume extent, using reverse dispersion modelling.The field of application of this European Standard includes the determination of the extent of the recognizable odour plume downwind from a source, under specific meteorological conditions (e.g. wind direction, wind speed, turbulence, etc. (see 7.3.2).This European Standard does not include:-the measurement of intensity of ambient odours;-the measurement of hedonic tone of ambient odours;-the measurement of the odour exposure in ambient air over a longer time period in an assessment area;-the calculation of estimated source emission rate from plume assessment using reverse dispersion modelling.An overview of the interaction between existing odour exposure assessment methods is given in Annex A including grid method (Part 1), plume method (Part 2) and olfactometry according EN 13725.

Committee
CEN/TC 264
DevelopmentNote
Supersedes PREN 16841-2. (11/2016)
DocumentType
Standard
PublisherName
Comite Europeen de Normalisation
Status
Current

VDI 3790 Blatt 2:2017-06 Environmental meteorology - Emissions of gases, odours and dusts from diffuse sources - Landfills

EN 13725:2003/AC:2006 AIR QUALITY - DETERMINATION OF ODOUR CONCENTRATION BY DYNAMIC OLFACTOMETRY
ISO 5492:2008 Sensory analysis — Vocabulary

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