Odour Monitoring
Links to Products and Services
You may be interested in the following products and services on our sister site - OSE Directory.
Dust Monitoring, Eye Protection, Height Safety Equipment, Air Quality Monitoring, Air Sampling, Landfill Gases, Odour Monitoring, Control and Treatment
Odour Monitoring Articles
Below is a list of articles that have been published on this topic.
Click on the title to view the whole article
Something Not To Be Sniffed At [Dec 2009]
People’s perception of odours is a subjective matter; what one person perceives to be a pleasant odour, someone else may find unpleasant or a nuisance, which makes it difficult to assess and mitigate smells that may constitute an environmental pollutant.
Dry Chemical Odour Scrubbers [Sep 2008]
The principle of distributed odour control
Dry chemical scrubbers are uniquely suited for use in collection system pump stations and in waste water treatment plants for the control of odours. They are inherently simple in their operation and function continuously without operator attention for extended periods of time. This type of scrubber, through the use of specialised gas-phase or dry-scrubbing air filtration media types(medias), is essentially able to achieve the complete removal of odours without the need for additional dilution air.
Real Time Odour Monitoring [Mar 2007]
Odour abatement monitoring using electronic noses
The equipment implemented to reduce odour emissions is designed with effectiveness in mind. However, some operating conditions may reduce that effectiveness without an industrial site being able to detect this quickly. Processes that most of the time have low odour emissions may become, under certain weather conditions, a major nuisance source.
Principles of Landfill Odour Emission and Control [Mar 2007]
Understanding, prioritising and controlling emissions
Throughout most countries in Europe by far the greatest proportion of waste is disposed of to landfill. In the UK this represents approximately 83% of all waste disposed1. Odours from landfill represent the single highest cause of complaint from waste management processes in the UK. These concerns also represent one of the most commonly cited reasons for refusal of extensions and applications for landfill operations. So is this a problem that we should be concerned with or an issue that will fade away as our dependency on landfill reduces and new technologies contribute to managing waste?
