About DOE Button Organization Button News Button Contact Us Button
Search  
US Department of Energy Seal and Header Photo
Science and Technology Button Energy Sources Button Energy Efficiency Button The Environment Button Prices and Trends Button National Security Button Safety and Health Button
_DOE Office of Fossil Energy Web Site
You are here: 

Techlines provide updates of specific interest to the fossil fuel community. Some Techlines may be issued by the Department of Energy Office of Public Affairs as agency news announcements.
 
 
Issued on:  February 27, 2002

New Project to Develop Web Tool for Analyzing Ohio River Valley Air Quality


Internet Database Could Help States Make Sound Decisions on Regulating Microscopic PM2.5 Particles

Photo: A PM2.5 air sampling station at the National Energy Technology Laboratory near Pittsburgh.

A PM2.5 air sampling station at DOE's Laboratory near Pittsburgh.

Pittsburgh, PA - For more than three years, the U.S. Department of Energy's National Energy Technology Laboratory has been tracking the flight of unseen airborne particles across the Upper Ohio River Valley.

By analyzing the "fingerprints" of these tiny specks - they are so small that 30 of them barely equal the width of a human hair - researchers are gaining a much better understanding of the airborne concentrations of these particles, where they originate, how they are formed, and most importantly, how best to control them.

Now, a new project selected by the Laboratory will compile the massive amounts of data collected from half a dozen DOE-funded regional air sampling stations into an Internet web-based tool that both researchers and regulators can use to improve their understanding of air quality in the region.

Advanced Technology Systems, Inc., of Pittsburgh, PA, has won an Energy Department competition to develop the comprehensive, computer based system.

Ambient air quality data collected from several ongoing projects in West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Ohio will be entered into a common database. A publicly-available, user-friendly, web-based tool then will be created to access, display, analyze and interpret the data.

The $1.92 million project - DOE's share is $1.5 million - will take three years to develop for full public access, but early prototypes of the web tool should become available to environmental professionals within the next couple of years.

The goal is to have a tool that State environmental agencies and others can use to study ambient air quality data not only from their area but also by comparing it to air quality data from surrounding areas. The database underlying the planned analytical tool will be structured to facilitate its integration with the nationwide relational database of air quality now being developed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

States are currently under pressure to develop implementation plans to comply with standards for these tiny particulates, called PM 2.5. In many cases, these standards will not only require reducing emissions of solid particles but also the sulfur and nitrogen oxide gases that can react chemically in the atmosphere to form the particles. PM 2.5 particles have been linked statistically to respiratory and cardiopulmonary illnesses.

- End of Techline -

For more information, contact:
Department of Energy: William W. Aljoe, NETL, 412-386-6569
Advanced Technology Systems: Dr. Robinson P. Khosah, 412-967-1900

Program Links

>

DOE's CO2 Capture and H2O Management Innovations Program


 

 

>

 Page owner:  Fossil Energy Office of Communications
Page updated on: March 30, 2004 

The White House USA.gov E-gov IQ FOIA Privacy Program
U.S. Department of Energy | 1000 Independence Ave., SW | Washington, DC 20585
1-800-dial-DOE | f/202-586-4403 | e/General Contact

Web Policies | No Fear Act | Privacy | Phone Book | Accessibility