A survey and analysis of liquid gasoline released to the environment during vehicle refueling at service stations
Method have been devised and demonstrated to characterize liquid gasoline release to the environment during vehicle refueling at service stations, and have been employed in a limited study using contemporary refueling equipment at well-maintained Stage II facilities in the district of Columbia and at conventional facilities in Baltimore, Maryland. Within the limitations of this study, results show that 33% and 37% of all refueling events at Stage II and conventional facilities, respectively, are completed without liquid release. When release occurs, it most commonly consists of a very small amount (drips of {lt} 0.1 gram). Larger releases, when they occur, are more common at Stage II facilities. When release is expressed in terms of the amount of fuel dispensed, the resultant emission factor is significantly larger at Stage II facilities.
- OSTI ID:
- 6555909
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
54 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
GASOLINE SERVICE STATIONS
EMISSION
EVAPORATION
GASOLINE
POLLUTION SOURCES
COMMERCIAL SECTOR
FUELS
LIQUID FUELS
MARKETERS
PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
PHASE TRANSFORMATIONS
RETAILERS
020900* - Petroleum- Environmental Aspects
540120 - Environment
Atmospheric- Chemicals Monitoring & Transport- (1990-)