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ARCHIVED REPORTS XR0008196
EnvironmentalHealth
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EHD Program Facility Records by Street Name
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EL DORADO
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1448
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3500 - Local Oversight Program
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PR0544673
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ARCHIVED REPORTS XR0008196
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Last modified
7/16/2020 8:07:27 AM
Creation date
7/18/2019 3:45:50 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
3500 - Local Oversight Program
File Section
ARCHIVED REPORTS
FileName_PostFix
XR0008196
RECORD_ID
PR0544673
PE
3528
FACILITY_ID
FA0006182
FACILITY_NAME
REGAL STATION #604
STREET_NUMBER
1448
Direction
N
STREET_NAME
EL DORADO
STREET_TYPE
ST
City
STOCKTON
Zip
95202
CURRENT_STATUS
02
SITE_LOCATION
1448 N EL DORADO ST
P_LOCATION
01
P_DISTRICT
001
QC Status
Approved
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EHD - Public
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COLLECTING LABORATORY SAMPLES <br /> Influent Sample <br /> The influent sample is obtained from a sample port located after <br /> the system vacuum pump before the carbon canisters . Sterile poly <br /> tubing is used to attach a 1 liter tedlar bag, fitted with a <br /> special septum valve and tubing bib, to the sample port . The <br /> sample port is on the pressure side of the pump and therefore the <br /> bag will fill without need of a pump Once the tedlar bag is <br /> filled, its valve is closed and locked and the appropriate label <br /> is placed on the tedlar bag <br /> Effluent Sample <br /> A sample port for the effluent is located in the exhaust stack of <br /> the final canister The flow pressure from the exhaust is great <br /> enough to fill a tedlar bag Sterile poly tubing is fitted to <br /> the exhaust port and the tedlar bag Then the sample valve of <br /> the tedlar bag is opened and the bag is filled with the sample <br /> Once the tedlar bag is full, the valve is closed and locked, the <br /> sample port closed, and the appropriate label is placed on the <br /> bag. <br /> The labels for both the influent and effluent tedlar bag samples <br /> show the date, time, sample ID# and analyses to be run <br /> • Both the influent and effluent tedlar bag samples are then placed <br /> within a cooler, on ice, and are hand delivered to WEGE` s <br /> laboratory that same day <br /> The vapor sample is then infected into an FID (Flame Ionizing <br /> Detector) chromatograph and the resulting chromatogram compared , <br /> to standard chromatograms of known TFH (Total Fuel Hydrocarbons, <br /> gasoline) and BTEX (benzene, toluene, ethlybenzene, and xylenes) <br /> concentrations . <br /> CO2 EMISSIONS <br /> Analysis of the vapor stream has revealed that one of the mayor <br /> constituent of the extracted vapor is carbon dioxide (CO2) . The <br /> CO2 is found in concentrations well above its normal <br /> concentration in air (0 . 0330) and therefore is probably the <br /> product of the oxidation of hydrocarbons by biological and/or <br /> chemical means <br /> page 3 of R604, 04/30/93 <br />
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