Pollution Control in Oil, Gas and Chemical Plants
Pollution Control in Oil, Gas and Chemical Plants
Pollution Control in Oil, Gas and Chemical Plants
123
Alireza Bahadori
School of Environment, Science and Engineering
Southern Cross University
East Lismore, NSW
Australia
The increasing energy demand over the past decades has resulted in a corre-
sponding growth and expansion in the refining and processing of crude petroleum,
natural gas, and many other chemical industries. The proliferation of refineries and
chemical plants, combined with the increasingly stringent quality requirements for
effluents discharged from these facilities, has underscored the need for perfecting
existing pollution control technology and developing improved approaches for
minimizing the pollution potential in this sector.
Exploration and production of natural gas and oil are rapidly expanding across
the world due to technological developments that have made extraction of pre-
viously untapped unconventional resources, such as shale gas, economically fea-
sible. In part due to expansion of operations to locations where the industry has
never been active, emissions of air pollutants, along with other potential envi-
ronmental and public health impacts, have come under increasing scrutiny.
Industries and municipalities account for the largest portion of waste discharges
that occur. Industries discharge an enormous variety of materials which include the
largest volume of waste and the most toxic of pollutants. Environmental control is
a very complex science. The trend is to move in the direction of pollution
avoidance rather than control.
This will add a tremendous cost to industrial budget. The public has tolerated
pollution until recently, but the condition has increased to the point that many may
suffer or even die because of it especially in developing countries.
In this book monitoring of wastewater control, equipment, and engineering
techniques will be discussed. This book specification is intended to cover the
safety and environmental control aspects as the essential requirements for water
pollution control in oil, gas and chemical plants. The scope is accomplished under
following titles:
• Refinery, gas processing industries, petrochemical plants, and oil terminal water
pollution control.
• Chemical industries, water pollution sources and control.
• Organic chemical manufacturing.
• Monitoring.
v
vi Preface
• Process control
• Threshold limit values (TLV).
The effects of air pollution on human health, on plants and animals are well
known. To ensure that all important methods of emission reduction have been
considered, this book is prepared to provide information which will be of values to
all concerned with measurements of general pollution of the air and involved in
reducing to a realistic minimum the emission from industrial processes. It is an
advantage that there are accepted methods for the measurement so that a sound
comparison of all results could be made.
Due to the various adverse impacts of noise on humans and environment, noise
should be controlled. The technique or the combination of techniques to be
employed for noise control depend upon the extent of the noise reduction required,
nature of the equipment used, and the economy aspects of the available techniques.
This book provides new insights and information with regard to reduction in the
noise exposure time or isolation of species from the noise sources. It covers noise
pollution control techniques besides providing personal ear protection, engineered
control for noise reduction at source, and/or diversion in the trajectory of sound
waves.
Last but not least I would like to sincerely thank the Springer Editorial Team,
Michael Luby and Merry Stuber, for their editorial assistance, advices and support
during working on this book project.
Contents
ix
x Contents
Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239
References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 309
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317