ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October
18,
1989
IN THE MATTER
OF:
)
)
R89-8
EXEMPTIONS FROM THE
)
(Identical
in Substance Rule)
DEFINITION OF VOM
)
ADOPTED RULE.
FINAL ORDER.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J. Anderson):
The Board hereby amends the definition of
“volatile organic material”
(“VOM”)
in 35
Ill. Adm. Code 211.122.
On July
19,
1989,
the Illinois
Environmental Regulatory Group
(IERG) filed
a Motion for Expedited Review,
which the Board granted
in its Proposed Order of July 27,
1989.
The Board
initiated this rulemaking pursuant to
the “identical
in
substance” amendment
(H.B.
1688)
to Section 9.1 of the Environmental
Protection Act
(Act)
prior to action
by the Governor.
This amendment, P.A.
86-0366, was signed by the Governor into
law on August 30, 1989.
Section
9.1(e)
of the Environmental Protection Act,
Ill.
Rev. Stat.,
ch.
111 1/2, par.
1009.1(e),
as
added
by P.A. 86—0366, provides
in significant part as follows:
The
Board
shall
exempt
from regulation
...
the volatile
organic compounds which
have been determined
by
the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
to
be exempt from regula-
tion
...
for ozone
due to negligible
photochemical reac-
tivity.
In
accordance
with
subsection
(b)
of
Section
7.2,
the
Board
shall
adopt
regulations
identical
in
substance
to
the
U.S.
Environmental
Protection
Agency
exemptions
or deletion
of exemptions published in policy
statements
on the control
of violative organic compounds
in
the
Federal
Register
by amending
the
list
of exemp-
tions
to
the
Board’s
definition
of
volatile
organic
material found
at
35
Ill. Adm. Code Part 211.
The provi-
sions and requirements of Title VII
of this Act shall
not
aoply
to regulations adopted under this subsection.
The Board proposed the present rule by its July 27,
1989 Proposed
Order.
Public notice
of
the proposed amendment appeared on August
18,
1989
at
13
Ill.
Reg.
13143.
The Board conducted
a public hearing required
by Section
110(a)
of the federal Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C.
7410(a),
and 40 CFR 51.102 on
September 26,
1989.
Discussion
On January
18,
1989,
at
54 Fed. Reg.
1987-1989,
USEPA published
a policy
statement indicating that three hydrochlorofluorocarbons and a hydrofluoro-
carbon
(“Halocarbons”) should be
added to the list of negligibly reactive
volatile organic compounds which may be exempt
from ozone SIP controls:
104-
5~l5
—2—
Chlorodifluoroethane
(HCFC—142b)
Dichlorofluoroethane (HCFC-141b)
Dichlorotrifluoroethane (HCFC-123)
Tetrafluoroethane (HFC-134a)
USEPA’s action
is
pursuant to the Montreal Protocol on Substances That Deplete
the Ozone Layer.
The four halocarbons are thought not
to contribute
significantly to tropospheric ozone buildup, and to also have a negligible
stratospheric ozone depletion potential.
As such,
they are good substitutes
for chemicals which
do contribute
to stratospheric ozone depletion, without
adversely affecting efforts
to control ground-level ozone concentrations.
IERG indicated early
in this proceeding that several
of
its members were
prepared
to begin using these halocarbons as substitutes
for those chemicals
which do harm the stratospheric ozone
layer.
However, they were not able to
make this substitution until the Board adopted
a final
and effective rule
exempting the
listed halocarbons from the definition of VOM.
As
noted above,
the Board granted expedited consideration of this proceeding and proposed
the
change immediately.
This was in anticipation of the Governor’s signature on
the authorizing legislation.
Now adopted, this amended definition
is intended
to bring the Board’s
list of
exemptions
into full accord
with the present
federal
listing and
into compliance with P.A. 86-0366.
The Board specifically
solicited comment
as
to whether the list
is
in fact complete and received
no
responses to that query.
Therefore the Board construes this silence as
affirmation that the Illinois and federal
lists of exempted compounds are in
full accord.
The Board notes, however, that although the authorizing statute has been
signed by the Governor,
it has
an effective date of January
1,
1990.
The
Board believes that
in adopting the rule today
it
is acting within the intent
of
the General Assembly, and complying with Illinois administrative proce-
dures,
in fulfilling the P.A. 86-0366 mandate after
it
has become
law but
before its effective date.
The Board will also proceed
to immediately file these rules with
the
Secretary of State
to become effective January
1,
1990.
In
“identical
in
substance” rulemaking proceedings, the Board’s
usual practice has been to
delay filing
for up to
30 days, particularly to give the USEPA an opportunity
to comment on the adopted rule before
it
is filed.
In light of the comments
submitted,
the Board sees no reason for a similar delay
in the filing of this
proceeding.
Public Comments
and Public Hearing Record
By
its July 27,
1989 Proposed Order, the Board
proposed the mandated
revisions
and invited public comments.
The Board received three public
comments.
The first public comment
in this matter
(P.C.
#1), received August
17,
1989, was from USEPA.
In response to
a Board query,
it
informed the Board
of
the need for
a public hearing
under federal
law.
The Second
(P.C.
#2) was
from the Office of the Secretary of State and received September 1~1, 1989.
It
indicates a small
number of
necessary Illinois Administrative Code format
corrections.
The third
(P.C.
#3) was from the
Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency
(Agency)
and received September 29,
1989.
The Agency
agrees
that the Board
should exempt
the four compounds from the definition of
1r~/~.
ry-~4
—3—
volatile organic material.
At the public
hearing, the Illinois Environmental Regulatory Group
(IERG)
and the
Illinois Department of
Energy and Natural Resources (Department)
testified.
IERG expressed
its support far adoption of amendments that would
exempt these four compounds.
IERG stated,
“certain industries within IERG
will be able to begin using some of these new compounds, which will decrease
the potential for harm to the upper atmosphere and not increase the potential
for harm to the
lower atmosphere.”
Tr.
4-5.
The Department directed the
Board’s attention to a study of chlorofluorocarbon use that
it
is presently
undertaking.
Although that study will
not directly affect the present
proceeding,
the Department alerted the Board and requested input.
Tr.
6-7.
The Board specifically
invited comment on the chemical nomenclature used
in the definition of “Volatile Organic Material”
in Section 211.122.
The
Board employed the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC)
names for most of the previously-exempted
chemicals.
The exception is
methylene chloride, whose
IUPAC name
is dichloromethane.
The Board did not
preserve
the common names and industrial
designations included
by the USEPA
in
its revisions of the Recommended
Policy on the Control
of Volatile Organic
Compounds.
See 54 Fed.
Reg. 1987
(Jan.
18,
1989);
45 Fed.
Reg. 48941 (July
22,
1980);
44 Fed.
Reg. 32042
(June
4,
1979); 42 Fed. Reg. 35314 (July
8,
1989).
For the four new fluorinated hydrocarbons included
in the present
rulemaking, the Board
included the industrial
designations
in parentheses
after the
IUPAC chemical
names.
Although the
IUPAC nomenclature
is the technically accepted designation
for chemical substances, and despite the fact that it
is often
a more precise
designation,
some members
of the regulated community more readily recognize
the common names and industrial
designations.
The Board
believes that use of
IUPAC names for the chemical compounds, with the addition of common names or
industrial designations in parentheses,
is the preferred naming scheme.
By
its public comment, the Agency has stated that this position
“is agreeable to
the Agency.”
See P.C.
#3.
Changes to the Text of the Proposed Rule
For the reasons outlined above, the Board revises the previously-exempted
chemical
names
to use the TUPAC
name as the primary designation for each
chemical
and
includes
a frequently
used common
name or industrial
name
in
parentheses,
as has been done for the new compounds added
in the present
rulemaking.
The names
of
the excluded chemicals will appear
as follows
in the
Section 211.122 definition
of volatile organic material:
Chlorodifluoroethane (HCFC—142b)
Chlorodifluoromethane (CFC—22)
Chloropentafluoroethane
(CFC—115)
Dichlorodifluoromethane
(CFC-12)
Dichlorofluoroethane
(HCFC-141b)
Dichlorotetrafluoroethane (CFC—114)
Dichlorotrifluoroethane
(HCFC-123)
Ethane
Methane
Dichloromethane
(Methylene chloride
104
507
—4—
Tetrafluoroethane (HFC-134a)
-1~3T4~-1,1,1-TrichloroethaneMeth
1 chloroform
Trichlorofluoromethane
CFC—11
Trichlorotrifluoroethane
CFC—113
Trifluoromethane (FC—23)
The Board also adopts the format revisions suggested by the Office of the
Secretary of State.
Included among these suggested revisions
is the addition
of “Section 9.4 of
the” to the definition of Acid Gasses.
Supplemental Discussion
It has been the Board’s custom to review sections being amended for
“cleanup” corrections.
There are a large number of minor editorial problems
with the definitions
section
in
35
Ill.
Adm. Code 211.
However,
in this
proceeding,
the Board has generally restricted editing to the definitions
of
“VOM” and the related definition of and “organic materials”
(“OM”),
as well
as
removing all
superscripts denoting degree
of temperature
to comport with the
policy of the Administrative Code Unit not to use superscripts and
subscripts.
For example,
it
is accepted convention to simply
leave a space
and express the temperature
as 270
F.
The Board will defer the other potential corrections to another
rulemaking.
For example, the definition of VOM references the
1986 edition of
the test methods of 40 CFR 60,
as does the closely related
35
Ill. Adm. Code
215.105.
The Board has
not proposed
to update this reference at this time
because
an update could
create dislocations
by referencing different editions
in different portions
of the rules.
Undertaking a review
of
all the
incorporations by reference in Subtitle B would greatly expand
the scope of
this expedited rulemaking.
However,
all these “abnormal”
incorporations by
reference need to
be consolidated into one or more incorporations by reference
sections, and
the dates
removed from the sections in which the references are
used,
as has been done
in the
othor’
Subtitles.
In this ~ay,it ~iill
be
possible
to routinely update these references
in a simple rulenaking without
risking dislocations.
As another example,
35
Ill. Adm. Code 211 includes many “local”
definitions which were intended to apply
to only a single
Part,
Subpart, or
section.
These need to
be
separated from the true “global” definitions, which
need to have the same meaning throughout
the Subtitle,
and moved
to the Part,
Subpart, or section
in which the
local definitions
are used.
The unnecessary
global definitions
are a major source
of the gridlock
in
air rulemaking.
In
any rulemaking
it
is necessary to work around these definitions,
and any
amendments
to them carry a risk oi unintended changes
to other portions of
the
rules.
ORDER
The Board
directs the Clerk
of the Board
to file
the following adopted
rule with
the Office
of
the Secretary of
State
and publish
a copy in the
Illinois Register.
—5-
TITLE
35:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
SUBTITLE
B:
AIR POLLUTION
CHAPTER
I:
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
SUBCHAPTER c:
EMISSION STANDARDS AND LIMITATIONS FOR
STATIONARY SOURCES
PART 211
DEFINITIONS AND GENERAL PROVISIONS
SUBPART A:
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section
211.101
Incorporations by Reference
211.102
Abbreviations and Units
SUBPART
B:
DEFINITIONS
Section
211.121
Other Definitions
211.122
Definitions
Appendix
A
Rule into Section Table
Appendix
B
Section into Rule Table
AUTHORITY:
Implementing Sections
9 and 9.1 and
10 and authorized by Section
27 of the Environmental Protection Act
(Ill. Rev. Stat.
1987,
oh.
111½,
pars.
1009,
1009.1,
1010,
as amended
by P.A. 86-0366, effective January
1,
1990).
SOURCE:
Adopted as
Chapter 2:
Air Pollution, Rule 201:
Definitions, R71-23,
4 PCB 191, filed and effective April
14,
1972;
amended
in R74—2 and P75—5,
32
PCB 295,
at
3
Ill.
Req.
5,
p.
777, effective February 3,
1979; amended
in R78-
3 and
4,
35 PCB 75 and 243, at
3
Ill.
Reg.
30, p.
124, effective July 28,
1979; amended
in R8O—5,
at
7
111.
Peg.
1244, effective January
21,
1983;
codified at
7
Ill.
Req.
13590; amended
in R82-1
(Docket
A)
at
10
Ill.
Reg.
12624, effective July
7,
1986; amended
in P85-21(A)
at
11
Ill.
Peg.
11747,
effective June 29,
1987; amended
in R86-34 at
11
Ill.
Reg.
12267, effective
July 10,
1987;
amended
in R86-39
at
11 Ill. Reg. 20804, effective December
14,
1987;
amended
in R82-14 and P86-37
at
12
111.
Reg. 787, effective December 24,
1987;
amended
in P86-18
at
12
Ill.
Reg.
7284,
effective April
8,
1988;
amended
in R86-10 at
12
Ill
Reg. 7621, effective April
11,
1988;
amended
in R88—23
at
13
Ill.
Reg.
10862, effective June 27,
1989; amended
in P89—8 at
13 Ill.
Reg.
,
effective January
1,
1990.
SUBPART
B:
DEFINITIONS
Section 211.122
Definitions
“Accumulator”:
The reservoir of a condensing unit receiving the
condensate from a surface condenser.
“Acid Gases”:
For the purposes of Section 9.4 of the Environmental
Protection Act (the Act)
(Ill.
Rev. Stat.
1987,
ch.
111
½,
par.
1009.4), hydrogen chloride, hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen bromide,
which exist
as gases,
liquid mist,
or any combination thereof.
104-509
—6-
“Actual Heat Input”:
The quantity of heat produced
by the combustion
of fuel using the gross heating value of the fuel.
“Aeration”:
The practice of forcing air through bi~lkstored grain to
maintain the condition of the grain.
“Afterburner”:
A device
in which materials
in gaseous effluents are
combusted.
“Air Dried Coating”: Coatings that dry by the use of air or forced
air at temperatures up to 363.15~K (194~F).
“Annual Grain Through-Put”:
Unless otherwise shown by the owner
or
operator, annual
grain through-put for grain-handling operations,
which have been
in operation for three consecutive years prior to
June 30,
1975,
shall
be determined by adding grain receipts and
shipments
for the three previous fiscal years and dividing the total
by
6.
The annual grain through-put for grain—handling operations
in
operation for less than three consecutive years prior to June 30,
1975,
shall
be determined by
a reasonable three—year estimate; the
owner or operator shall document the reasonableness of his three-year
estimate.
“Architectural Coating”:
Any coating used for residential
or
commercial
buildings or their appurtenances, or for
industrial
buildings which
is site applied.
“Asphalt”:
The dark—brown to black cementitious material
(solid,
semisolid or liquid
in consistency)
of which the main constituents
are bitumens which occur natrually or as
a residue of petroleum
refining.
“Asphalt
Prime Coat”:
A low-viscosity liquid asphalt applied to an
absorbent surface
as
the first
of more than one asphalt coat.
“Automobile”:
Any first division motor vehicle
as that term
is
defined
in the
Illinois Vehicle Code
(Ill.
Rev. Stat.
1987,
ch. 95½,
pars 1—100 et
seq.).
“Automobile or
Light-Duty Truck Manufacturing Plant”:
A facility
where parts are manufactured or finished for
eventual
inclusion into
a finished automobile or
light-duty truck ready
for sale
to vehicle
dealers, but
not including customizers,
body shops and other
repainters.
“Batch Loading”:
The process
of loading
a number of
individual
parts
at
the same time
for degreasing.
“Bead-Dipping”:
The dipping of
an assembled tire bead into
a
solvent-based cement.
“British Thermal
Unit”:
The quantity of heat required
to raise
one
pound of water from 6O~F
to 61~F
(abbreviated
btu).
104—510
—7-
“Bulk Gasoline Plant”:
Any gasoline storage and distribution
facility that receives gasoline from bulk gasoline terminals by
delivery vessels and distributes gasoline to gasoline dispensing
facilities.
“Bulk Gasoline Terminal”:
Any gasoline storage and distribution
facility that receives gasoline by pipeline, ship or barge,
and
distributes gasoline to bulk gasoline plants or gasoline dispensing
facil ities.
“Can Coating”:
The application of
a coating material to a single
walled container that
is manufactured from metal
sheets thinner than
29
gauge (0.0141 in).
“Certified Investigation”:
A report
signed by
Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency
(Agency)
personnel certifying whether a grain—
handling operation
(or portion thereof) or grain-drying operation is
causing or tending
to
cause air pollution.
Such report must describe
the signatory’s investigation, including
a summary
of those facts on
which he relies to certify whether the grain-handling or grain—drying
operation
is causing or threatening or allowing the discharge or
emission of any contaminant into the environment so
as
to cause or
tend to cause air pollution
in
Illinois, either alone or in
combination with contaminants from other sources, or so as
to violate
regulations or standards adopted
by the Pollution Control
Board
(Board) under the Environmental Protection Act
(Act).
The certified
investigation shall
be open to
a reasonable public inspection and may
be copied upon payment
of the actual
cost of reproducing the
original.
“Choke
Loading”:
That method of transferring grain from the grain-
handling operation to any vehicle for shipment or delivery which
precludes
a free fall velocity
of grain from
a discharge spout
into
the receiving container.
“Cleaning and Separating Operation”:
That operation where foreign
and undesired substances are removed from the grain.
“Clear Coating”:
Coatings that lack color and opacity or are
transparent using the undercoat as
a reflectant base or undertone
color.
“Closed Purge System”:
A system that
is
not open to the atmosphere
and
that is composed of
piping, connections, and,
if necessary, flow
inducing devices that transport
liquid or vapor from a piece or
pieces of equipment to
a control device,
or return the
liquid or
vapor to the process
line.
“Closeci Vent System”:
A system that
is not open to the atmosphere
and that is composed of piping, connections, and,
if necessary, flow
inducing devices that transport gas or vapor from a piece or pieces
of equipment to
a control
device, or return the gas or vapor to the
process
line.
104 -511
-
B—
“Coal
Refuse”:
Waste products of coal mining, cleaning and coal
preparation operations containing coal, matrix material, clay and
other organic and inorganic material.
“Coating Applicator”:
Equipment used to apply a surface coating.
“Coating
Line”:
An operation where a surface coating
is applied to a
material and subsequently the coating
is dried and/or cured.
“Coating Plant”:
Any building, structure or installation that
contains
a coating line and which
is located on one or more
contiguous or adjacent properties and which
is
owned or operated by
the same person
(or by persons under common control).
“Coil
Coating”:
The application of a coating material
to any flat
metal
sheet
or strip that comes
in rolls or coils.
“Cold Cleaning”:
The process of cleaning and removing soils from
surfaces by spraying,
brushing, flushing or immersion while
maintaining the organic solvent below
its boiling point.
Wipe
cleaning
is not included in this definition.
“Complete Combustion”:
A process
in which
all carbon contained
in
a
fuel or gas stream is converted to carbon dioxide.
“Component”:
Any piece
of equipment which
has the potential to
leak
volatile organic material
including, but not
limited to, pump seals,
compressor seals,
seal
oil degassing vents,
pipeline valves, pressure
relief devices, process drains and open ended valves.
This
definition excludes valves which are not externally regulated,
flanges,
and equipment
in heavy liquid
service.
For purposes of
35
Ill.
Adm. Code ?15.Suhpart Q-35
114T Adm~Code 215~--, this
definition also excludes bleed ports
of gear pumps
in polymer
service.
“Concentrated Nitric Acid Manufacturing Process”:
Any acid producing
facility manufacturing nitric acid with a concentration equal
to or
greater than 70 percent by weight.
“Condensate”:
Hydrocarbon
liquid separated from
its associated
gasses which condenses
due to changes
in the temperature or pressure
and remains liquid
at standard conditions.
‘Control
Device”:
For purposes
of Subpart
Q,
an enclosed combustion
device, vapor recovery system,
flare,
or closed container.
“Conveyorized Degreasing”:
The continuous process
of cleaning
and
removing
soils from surfaces utilizing either cold or vaporized
solvents.
“Crude Oil”:
A naturally occurring mixture which consisits of
hydrocarbons and sulfur, nitrogen or oxygen derivatives
of
hydrocarbons and which
is
a liquid
at standard conditions.
104--512
-9-
“Crude Oil Gathering”:
The transportation of crude oil
or condensate
after custody transfer between a production facility and a reception
point.
“Custody Transfer”:
The transfer of produced petroleum and/or
condensate after processing
and/or treating
in the producing
operations,
from storage tanks or automatic transfer facilities
to
pipelines or any other forms
of transportation.
“Cutback Asphalt”:
Any asphalt which has been liquified by blending
with petroleum solvents other than residual fuel oil
and
has not been
emulsified with water.
“Degreaser”:
Any equipment or system used
in solvent cleaning.
“Delivery Vessel”:
Any tank truck or trailer equipped with a storage
tank that is used for the transport of gasoline
to
a stationary
storage tank at
a gasoline dispensing facility, bulk gasoline plant
or bulk gasoline terminal.
“Distillate Fuel Oil”:
Fuel oils of grade No.
1 or
2
as
specified
in
detailed requirements for fuel oil A.S.T.M. D—369-69
(1971).
“Dry Cleaning Facility”:
A facility engaged
in the cleaning
of
fabrics using an essentially nonaqueous solvent by means of
one or
more solvent washes, extraction of
excess solvent by spinning and
drying
by tumbling
in an
airstream.
The facility includes, but
is
not limited to, washers, dryers, filter and purification systems,
waste disposal systems, holding tanks, pumps
and attendant piping and
valves.
“Dump-Pit Area”:
Any area where grain
is received at
a grain—
handling or grain-drying operation.
“Effective Grate Area”:
That area of a dump—pit grate through which
air passes,
or would pass,
when aspirated.
“Effluent Water Separator”:
Any tank,
box, sump or other apparatus
in which
any organic material floating on or entrained or contained
in water entering such tank,
box, sump or other apparatus is
physically separated and removed from such water prior to outfall,
drainage or recovery
of
such water.
“Emission Rate”:
Total
quantity of any
air contaminant discharge
into the atmosphere
in any one-hour period.
“End Sealing Compound Coat”:
A compound applied to can ends which
functions as
a gasket when the end
is assembled on
the can.
“Excess Air”:
Air supplied
in addition to the theoretical quantity
necessary for complete combustion of all
fuel and/or combustible
waste material.
104-513
-10-
“Excessive Release”:
A discharge of more than 295g (0.65 pounds) of
mercaptans and/or hydrogen sulfide into the atmosphere
in any five
minute period.
“Existing Grain-Drying Operation”:
Any grain—drying operation the
construction or modification of which was commenced prior to June 30,
1975.
“Existing Grain—Handling Operation”:
Any grain—handling operation
the construction or modification of which was commenced prior
to June
30, 1975.
“Exterior Base Coat”:
An initial coating applied
to the exterior of
a can after the can body has been formed.
“Exterior End Coat”:
A coating applied by rollers
or spraying
to the
exterior end of a can.
“External Floating Roof”:
A storage vessel cover
in
an open top tank
consisting of
a double deck or pontoon single deck which
is supported
by the petroleum liquid being contained and
is equipped with
a
closure
seal between the deck edge and tank wall.
“Extreme Performance Coating”:
Coatings designed for exposure
to any
of the following:
the ambient weather conditions,
temperatures above
368.15z
K (203~F), detergents, abrasive and scouring agents,
solvents, corrosive atmospheres,
or other similar extreme
environmental conditions.
“Fabric Coating”:
The coating of
a
textile substrate.
“Final
Repair Coat”:
The repainting
of any coating which
is damaged
during
vehicle assen~bly.
“Firebox”:
The chamber or compartment of
a boiler or furnace
in
which materials are burned,
but not
the combustion chamber
or
afterburner of
an
incinerator.
“Flexographic Printing”:
The application of words,
designs and
pictures
to a substrate by means
of
a roll printing technique
in
which the pattern
to
be applied
is raised above the printing roll and
the
image
carrier
is made of elastomeric materials.
“Floating Roof”:
A roof on a stationary tank, reservoir or other
container which moves vertically upon change
in
volume of
the stored
material.
“Freeboard Hei~ht’: For open top vapor degreasers,
the distance from
the top of the vapor zone to the top of
the degreaser tank.
For cold
cleaning degreasers, the distance from the solvent
to the
top of the
degreaser tank.
“Fuel
Combustion Emission Source”:
Any furnace, boiler or similar
equipment used for the primary purpose of producing heat or power
by
104-514
—11—
indirect heat transfer.
“Fuel Gas System”:
A system for collection of refinery fuel gas
including, but not
limited
to,
piping for collecting tail gas from
various process units, mixing drums and controls and distribution
piping.
“Fugitive Particulate Matter”:
Any particulate matter emitted into
the atmosphere other than through
a
stack, provided that nothing
in
this definition or
in
35
Ill. Adm. Code 212.Subpart
K shall
exempt
any source from compliance with other provisions of
35
Ill. Adm. Code
212 otherwise applicable merely because of the absence of
a stack.
“Gas Service”:
Means that the component contains process fluid that
is
in the gaseous
state at operating conditions.
“Gasoline”:
Any petroleum distillate having
a Reid vapor pressure of
4 pounds or greater.
“Gasoline Dispensing Facility”:
Any site where gasoline
is
transferred from a stationary storage tank to
a motor vehicle
gasoline tank used to provide fuel
to the engine of that motor
vehicle.
“Grain”:
The whole kernel
or seed of corn, wheat,
oats,
soybeans and
any other cereal
or oil
seed plant;
and the normal
fines, dust and
foreign matter which results from harvesting,
handling or
conditioning.
The grain shall
be unaltered by grinding or
processing.
“Grain-Drying Operation”:
Any operation, excluding aeration,
by
which moisture
is removed from grain and which typically uses forced
ventilation with the addition of
heat.
“Grain-Handling
and Conditioning Operation”:
A grain storage
facility and its associate grain transfer, cleaning, drying, grinding
and mixing operations.
“Grain-Handling Operation”:
Any operation where one or more of the
following grain-related processes
(other than grain-drying operation,
portable grain—handling equipment, one-turn
storage space,
and
excluding flour mills and feed mills)
are performed:
receiving,
shipping, transferring, storing, mixing or treating of grain or other
processes pursuant to normal grain operations.
“Green Tire Spraying”:
The spraying of green tires, both inside and
outside, with release compounds which help remove air from the tire
during molding
and prevent the tire from sticking to the mold after
curing.
“Green Tires”:
Assembled tires
before molding and curing have
occurred.
“Gross Heating Value”:
Amount of
heat produced when a unit quantity
104 --515
—12—
of fuel
is burned
to carbon dioxide and water vapor,
and the water
vapor condensed as descibed
in A.S.T.M. 0-2015-66,
D-900—55, 0-1826-
64 and 0-240-64.
“Heavy Liquid”:
Liquid with a true vapor pressure of
less than 0.3
kPa (0.04 psi)
at
294.32.
K
(702.
F) or 0.1 Reid Vapor Pressure as
determined
by A.S.T.M. method 0-323; or which when distilled requires
a temperature of
3002.
F or greater to recover 10
of the liquid
as
determined by A.S.T.M. method 0-86.
“Heavy Metals”:
For the purposes of Section 9.4 of the
Act,
elemental,
ionic,
or combined forms
of arsenic,
cadmium, mercury,
chromium, nickel
and
lead.
“Heavy, Off-Highway Vehicle Products”:
For the purposes of Section
215.204(k), heavy off—highway vehicle products shall
include:
heavy
construction, mining,
farming or material
handling equipment;
heavy
industrial
engines; diesel-electric
locomotives and associated power
generation equipment;
and the components of such equipment or
engines.
“Hot Well”:
The reservoir of
a condensing unit receiving the
condensate from a barometric condenser.
“Housekeeping Practices”:
Those activities specifically defined
in
the list of housekeeping practices developed by the Joint EPA
—
Industry Task Force and included herein under
35
Ill.
Adm. Code
212.461.
“Incinerator”:
Combustion apparatus
in which
refuse
is
burned.
“Indirect Heat Transfer”:
Transfer of heat
in
such
a way that the
source
of
heat
does
not
come
into
direct
contact
with
process
materials.
“In-Process Tank”:
A container used for mixing, blending, heating,
reacting, holding, crystallizing, evaporating, or cleaning operations
in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals.
“In-situ Sampling Systems”:
Nonextractive samplers or in—line
samplers.
“Interior Body Spray Coat”:
A coating applied by spray
to
the
interior of
a can
after the can body has been formed.
“Internal Transferring Area”:
Areas and associated equipment used
for conveying grain among the various grain operations.
“Large Appliance Coating”:
The application of
a coating material
to
the component metal parts
(including but
not limited
to doors, cases,
lids,
panels and interior support parts)
of
residential
and
commercial washers, dryers, ranges, refrigerators, freezers, water
heaters, dishwashers, trash compactors, air conditioners and other
similar products.
104 51(~
—13—
“Light—Duty Truck”:
Any second division motor vehicle,
as that term
is defined
in the Illinois Vehicle Code,
(Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1987, ch.
95½,
pars.
1-100 et
seq.) weighing less than 3854 kilograms (8500
pounds)
gross.
“Liquid—Mounted Seal”:
A primary
seal mounted
in continuous
contact
with the
liquid between the tank wall and the floating roof edge
around the circumference of the roof.
“Liquid Service”: Means that the equipment or component contains
process fluid that
is
in
a liquid
state
at operating conditions.
“Liquids Dripping”:
Any visible
leaking from a seal
including
spraying, misting, ciouding and
ice formation.
“Load-Out Area”:
Any area where grain
is transferred from the grain-
handling operation to any vehicle for shipment or delivery.
“Low Solvent Coating”:
A coating which contains less organic solvent
than the conventional
coatings used by the industry.
Low solvent
coatings include water—borne, higher solids, electro—deposition and
powder coatings.
“Magnet Wire Coating”:
The application of
a coating of electrically
insulating varnish or enamel
to conducting wire to be used in
electrical
machinery.
“Major Dump
Pit”:
Any dump pit with an annual grain through-put of
more than 300,000 bushels, or which receives more than 40
of the
annual
grain through-put of the grain-handling operation.
“Major Metropolitan Area (MMA)”:
Any county or group of counties
which
is defined by the following Table:
MAJOR METROPOLITAN AREAS
IN ILLINOIS (MMA’s)
MMA
COUNTIES INCLUDED
IN
MMA
Champaign—Urbana
Champaign
Chicago
Cook,
Lake, Will,
DuPage,
McHenry, Kane,
Grundy,
Kendall, Kankakee
Decatur
Macon
Peoria
Peoria, Tazewell
Rockford
Winnebago
Rock Island
--
Moline
Rock Island
Springfield
Sangamon
St.
Louis
(Illinois)
St.
Clair, Madison
Bloomlington
-—
Normal
McLean
“Major Population Area (MPA)”:
Areas of major population
concentration
in Illinois,
as described below:
104 517
-14-
The area within the counties of Cook;
Lake;
DuPage; Will; the
townships of Burton, Richmond, McHenry, Greenwood, Nunda,
Door,
Algonquin, Grafton and the municipality of Woodstock, plus
a
zone extending two miles beyond the boundary of said
municipality located
in McHenry County; the townships of Dundee,
Rutland, Elgin, Plato, St. Charles, Campton, Geneva, Blackberry,
Batavia, Sugar Creek and Aurora located
in Kane County; and the
municipalities of Kankakee, Bradley and Bourbonnais, plus
a zone
extending two miles
beyond the boundaries of said municipalities
in Kankakee County.
The area within the municipalities of Rockfard and Loves Park,
plus a zone extending two miles beyond the boundaries
of said
municipalities.
The area within the municipalities
of Rock
Island,
Moline,
East
Moline, Carbon Cliff, Milan, Oak Grove, Silvis,
Hampton,
Greenwood
and Coal Valley, plus
a zone extending two miles
beyond the boundaries of
said municipalities.
The area within the municipalities of Galesburg and East
Galesburg, plus a zone extending two miles beyond
the boundaries
of said municipalities.
The area within the municipalities of Bartonville, Peoria and
Peoria Heights, plus a zone extending two miles beyond the
boundaries of said municipalities.
The area within the municipalities of Pekin,
North Pekin,
Marquette Heights, Creve Coeur and East Peoria,
plus a zone
extending two miles beyond the boundaries
of
said
municipalities.
The area within the municipalities of Bloomington and hormal,
plus
a zone extending two miles beyond the boundaries
of
said
municipal ities.
The area within the municipalities of Champaign, Urbana and
Savoy, plus
a zone extending two miles
beyond the boundaries of
said municipalities.
The area within the municipalities of Decatur, Mt.
Zion,
Harristown and Forsyth, plus
a zone extending two miles beyond
the boundaries
of said municipalities.
The area within the municipalities of Springfield,
Leland Grove,
Jerome, Southern View, Grandview, Sherman and Chatham, plus
a
zone extending two miles beyond the boundaries
of said
municipal
i ties.
The
area
within
the
townships
of
Godfrey,
Foster,
Wood
River,
Fort Russell, Chouteau, Edwardsville, Venice,
Narneoki, Alton,
Granite City and Collinsville
located
in Madison County; and the
townships of Stites,
Canteen, Centreville,
Caseyville,
St.
104
--5.13
—15—
Clair, Sugar Loaf and Stookey
located
in St. Clair County.
“Manufacturing Process”:
A process emission source or series
of
process emission sources used to convert raw materials,
feed stocks,
subassemblies or other components
into a product, either for sale or
for use as
a component
in a subsequent manufacturing process.
“Metal
Furniture Coating”:
The application of
a coating material to
any furniture piece made of metal
or any metal
part which
is or will
be assembled with other metal, wood, fabric, plastic or glass parts
to form a furniture piece including, but not limited to, tables,
chairs, wastebaskets, beds,
desks,
lockers, benches, shelving, file
cabinets,
lamps and room dividers.
This definition shall
not apply
to any coating line coating metal
parts or products that
is
identified under the Standard Industrial
Classification Code for
Major Groups
33,
34,
35, 36,
37,
38,
39, 40 or 41.
“Miscellaneous Fabricated
Product Manufacturing Process”:
A manufacturing process involving one or more of the following
applications, including any drying and curing of formulations,
and capable of emitting volatile organic material:
Adhesives to fabricate or assemble non-furniture components or
products
Asphalt solutions to paper or fiberboard
Asphalt to paper or felt
Coatings or
dye to leather
Coatings to plastic
Coatings to rubber
or glass
Curing of furniture adhesives
in an oven which would emit in
excess of
10 tons of volatile organic material per year if no
air pollution control equipment were used
Disinfectant material to manufactured items
Plastic foam scrap or
“fluff” from the manufacture
of foam
containers and packaging material
to form
resin pellets
Resin solutions
to fiber substances
Rubber solutions to molds
Viscose solutions for food casings
The storage and handling of formulations associated with the
process described above.
104-519
—16-
The use and handling of organic
liquids and other substances for
clean-up operations associated with
the process described above.
“Miscellaneous Formulation Manufacturing Process”:
A manufacturing process which compounds one or more of the
following and
is capable of emitting
volatile organic material:
Adhesives
Asphalt solutions
Caulks, sealants or waterproofing agents
Coatings, other than paint and
ink
Concrete curing compounds
Dyes
Friction materials and compounds
Resin solutions
Rubber solutions
Viscose solutions
The storage and handling of formulations associated with
the
process described
above.
The use and handling of organic
liquids and other substances for
clean—up operations associated with the process described
abeve’.
“Miscellaneous Metal
Parts
and Products”:
For the purpose
of
35
Ill.
Adm. Code 215.204, miscellaneous metal
parts and products shall
include
farm
machinery,
garden
machinery,
small
appliances,
commercial
machinery,
industrial machinery,
fabricated metal
products
and any other industrial category which coats metal
parts or products
under the Standard Industrial Classification Code for Major Groups
33, 34,
35,
36, 37,
38
or
39 with the exception of the following:
coating
lines subject
to
35
Ill.
Adm. Code 215.2O4(a)-(i) and
(k),
automobile
or
light—duty
truck
refinishing,
the
exterior
of
marine
vessels and the customized top coating of automobiles and trucks
if
production
is
less than thirty-five vehicles per day.
“Miscellaneous Organic Chemical Manufacturing Process”:
A manufacturing process which
produces by chemical reaction, one
or more of the following organic compounds
or mixtures
of
organic compounds
and which
is capable
of emitting volatile
organic materials:
Chemicals
listed
in
35
Ill.
Adm. Code 215. Appendix
D.
l1)4~-520
-17-
Chlorinated and sulfonated compounds
Cosmetic, detergent,
soap or surfactant intermediaries or
specialties and products
Di
Si
nfectants
Food additives
Oil
and petroleum product additives
Plasticizers
Resins
or polymers
Rubber additives
Sweeteners
Varnishes
The storage
and handling
of formulations associated with the
process described above.
The use and handling of organic
liquids and other substances for
clean-up operations associated with the process described above.
“Mixing Operation”:
The operation of combining two or more
ingredients,
of which
at
least one
is
a grain.
“New Grain-Drying Operation”:
Any grain-drying operation the
construction or modification of which
is commenced on or
after June
30, 1975.
“New Grain-Handling Operation”:
Any grain—handling operation the
construction of modification of which
is commenced on or after June
30,
1975.
“No Detectable Volatile Organic Material
Emissions”:
A discharge of
volatile organic material
into the atmosphere
as
indicated by an
instrument reading
of
less than
500 ppm above background
as
determined
in accordance with 40 CFR 60.485(c).
“One Hundred
Percent Acid”:
Acid with
a specific gravity of
1.8205
at
302.
C
in the case of sulfuric acid and 1.4952
at
302.
C
in the case
of nitric acid.
“One-Turn Storage Space”:
That space used to store grain with a
total
annual
trirough-put not in excess
of the total
bushel
storage of
that space.
“Opacity”:
A condition which renders material partially or wholly
impervious to transmittance of
light and causes obstruction
of
an
104-- 52
1
-18-
observer’s view.
For the purposes of these regulations, the
following equivalence between opacity
and Ringelmann
shall
be
employed:
Opacity Percent
Ringelmann
10
0.5
20
1.
30
1.5
40
2.
60
3.
80
4.
100
5.
“Open Top Vapor Degreasing”:
The batch process
of cleaning and
removing
soils from surfaces by condensing hot solvent vapor on the
colder metal
parts.
“Operator of Gasoline Dispensing Facility”:
Any person who
is the
lessee of or operates, controls or supervises
a gasoline dispensing
facility.
“Organic Material”:
Any chemical compound of carbon including
diluents and thinners which are liquids at
standard conditions
and
which are used as dissolvers, viscosity reducers or cleaning agents,
but excluding methane, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, carbonic
acid, metallic carbonic acid,
metallic carbide, metallic carbonates
and ammoniuni carbonate.
“Organic Materials”:
For the purposes of Section 9.4 of the Act, any
chemical
compound of carbon~including diluents and thinners which
are
liquids
at standard conditions
and which are
used as dissolvers,
viscosity
reducers—T--
or cleaning
agents,
and
polychlorinated
dibenzo-p-dioxins,
polychlorinated
dibenzofurans
and
polynuclear
aromatic
hydrocarbons
-sha4-1
be
eons5~deredto
be-are organic
materialsT,
while
methaneMethane,
carbon
monoxide,
carbon
dioxide,
carbonic
acid,
metallic
carbonic
acid,
metallic
carbide,
metallic
carbonates and ammoniun carbonate —sha34 not be eoRs4dered
to be —are
not organic materials. fo~the ~~poses of
~34T
Rev~Stat~1987w eh-~-
~J4
½~parT
1009-T4T
“Organic Vapor”:
Gaseous
phase of
an organic material or a mixture
of organic materials present
in the atmosphere.
“Overvarnish”:
A coating applied directly over
ink or printing.
“Owner of Gasoline Dispensing Facility”:
Any person who has
legal
or
equitable title
to
a
stationary storage tank at
a gasoline dispensing
facil
i
ty.
“Packaging Rotogravure Printing”:
Rotogravure printing upon paper,
paper board, metal
foil,
plastic film and other substrates, which
are,
in subsequent operations, formed into packaging products or
labels for articles to
be
sold.
104-522
-19-
“Paint Manufacturing Plant”:
A plant that mixes,
blends,
or
compounds enamels, lacquers, sealers, shellacs, stains, varnishes or
pigmented surface coatings.
“Paper Coating”:
The application
of
a coating material
to paper or
pressure sensitive tapes, regardless of substrate,
including web
coating on plastic fibers and decorative coatings on metal
foil.
“Particulate Matter”:
Any solid or liquid material, other than
water, which exists
in finely divided
form.
“Petroleum Liquid”:
Crude oil, condensate or any finished or
intermediate product manufactured at
a petroleum refinery, but not
including Number
2 through Number
6 fuel oils as specified in
A.S.T.M. D-396-69, gas turbine fuel oils Numbers 2-GT through 4—GT as
specified in A.S.T.M. D—288O-71 or diese
fuel oils Numbers 2-0 and
4—D,
as specified
in A.S.T.M. D-975-68.
“Petroleum Refinery”:
Any facility engaged
in producing gasoline,
kerosene, distillate fuel oils,
residual
fuel oils,
lubricants, or
other products through distillation, cracking, extraction or
reforming of unfinished petroleum derivatives.
“Pharmaceutical”:
Any compound or mixture, other than food, used
in
the prevention,
diagnosis, alleviation,
treatment or cure of disease
in man and
animal.
“Photochemically Reactive Material”:
Any organic material with an
aggregate of more than 20 percent
of
its total
volume composed of the
chemical compounds classified below or the composition
of which
exceeds any of the following individual
percentage composition
limitations.
Whenever any photochemically reactive material or any
constituent of
any organic material may be classified from its
chemical
structure into more than one of the above groups of organic
materials it shall
be
consid red as
a member of the most reactive
group, that is, the group having the
least allowable percent of the
total
organic materials.
A combination of hydrocarbons, alcohols, aldehydes, esters,
ethers
or ketones having
an olefinic or cyclo—olefinic types
of
unsaturation:
5 percent.
This definition does not
apply to
perchlorethylene or trichloroethylene.
A combination of aromatic compounds with eight or more carbon
atoms to the molecule except ethyl-benzene:
8 percent.
A combination of ethylbenzene, ketones having branched
hydrocarbon structures or toluene:
20 percent.
“Pneumatic Rubber Tire Manufacture”:
The production of pneumatic
rubber tires with a bead diameter up to but not including 20.0 inches
and cross
section dimension up to
12.8 inches,
but not including
specialty tires for antique or other vehicles when produced on
104-523
-20-
equipment separate from normal
production
lines for passenger or
truck type tires.
“Polybasic Organic Acid Partial Oxidation Manufacturing Process”:
Any process involving partial oxidation of hydrocarbons with air to
manufacture polybasic acids or their anhydrides,
such as maleic
anhydride,
phthalic anhydride, terephthalic acid, isophthalic acid,
trimelletic anhydride.
“Portable Grain-Handling Equipment”:
Any equipment (excluding
portable grain dryers)
that
is designed and maintained to be movable
primarily for use in
a non-continuous operation for loading
and
unloading one-turn storage space,
and
is not physically connected
to
the grain elevator, provided that the manufacturer’s rated capacity
of the equipment does not exceed
10,000 bushels per hour.
“Portland Cement Process”:
Any facility manufacturing portland
cement
by either the wet or dry process.
“Power Driven Fastener Coating”:
The coating of nail,
staple, brad
and finish nail fasteners where such fasteners are fabricated from
wire or rod of 0.0254 inch diameter or greater, where
such fasteners
are bonded
into coils or
strips,
such coils and strips containing a
number of such fasteners, which fasteners are manufactured for use
in
power tools,
and which fasteners must conform with formal standards
for specific uses established
by various federal
and national
organizations including Federal Specification FF—N—lO5b of the
General
Services Administration dated August 23,
1977 (does not
include any
later amendments or editions;
U.S. Army Armament Research
and Development Command, Attn:
DROAR-TST, Rock
Island,
IL 61201),
Bulletin UM—25d of the U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban
Development
—
Federal
Housing Administration dated September
5,
1973
(does
not
include
any
later
amendments
or
editions;
Department
of
HUD,
547
W.
Jackson
Blvd.,
Room
1005,
Chicago,
IL
60606),
and
toe
Model
Building
Code
of
the
Council
of
American
Building
Officials,
and
similar
standards.
For
the
purposes
of
this
definition,
the
terms
“brad”
and
‘finish
nail
refer
to
single
leg
fasteners
fabri-
cated
in the same manner
as staples.
The application of coatings
to
staple,
brad, and finish nail fasteners may be associated with the
incremental forming of such fasteners in
a cyclic
or repetitious
manner
(incremental
fabrication) or with the forming
of strips
of
such fasteners
as
a unit from
a band of wires
(unit fabrication).
“PPM
(Vol)
—
(Parts
per
Million)
(Volume)”:
A volume/volume ratio
which expresses the volumetric concentration of gaseous air
contaminant
in
a million unit volumes
of gas.
“Pressure Release”:
The emission of materials resulting from system
pressure
being
greater
than
set pressure of the pressure relief
device.
“Pressure Tank”:
A tank
in which fluids are stored at
a pressure
greater than atmospheric pressure.
l0!i -‘y~4
-21—
‘Prime Coat”:
The first film of coating material applied
in a
multiple coat operation.
“Prime Surfacer Coat”:
A film of coating material that touches up
areas on the surface not adequately covered
by the prime coat before
application
of the top coat.
“Process”:
Any stationary emission source other than a fuel
combustion emission source
or
an
incinerator.
“Process Unit”:
Components
assembled to produce,
as intermediate or
final products, one or more of the chemicals listed
in
35
Ill. Adm.
Code 215.Appendix D.
A process unit can operate independently
if
supplied with sufficient feed or
raw materials and sufficient
storage
facilities for the product.
“Process Unit Shutdown”:
A work practice or operational procedure
that stops production from a process unit or part of
a process
unit.
An unscheduled work practice or operational procedure that
stops production from a process unit or part of a proce~.unit for
less than 24 hours
is not a process unit shutdown.
The use of spare
components and technically feasible bypassing of components without
stopping production
is
not
a process unit shutdown.
“Process Weight Rate”:
The actual weight or engineering
approximation thereof of all materials except liquid and gaseous
fuels and combustion air, introduced
into any process per hour.
For
a cyclical or batch operation, the process weight rate shall
be
determined
by dividing such actual weight or engineering
approximation thereof
by the number
of
hours
of operation excluding
anytime during which
the equipment
is idle.
For continuous
processes, the process weight
rate shall
be determined
by dividing
such actual weight or engineering approximation thereof
by the number
of hours
in one complete operation, excluding any time during which
the equipment is idle.
“Production Equipment Exhaust System”:
A system for collecting and
directing into the atmosphere emissions
of volatile organic material
from reactors, centrifuges and other process emission sources.
“Publication
Rotogravure Printing”:
Rotogravure printing upon paper
which
is subsequently formed
into books,
magazines, catalogues,
brochures, directories,
newspaper supplements or other types of non-
packaging printed materials.
“Purged
Process Fluid”:
Liquid or vapor from a process unit that
contains volatile organic material and that results from flushing or
cleaning
the sample
line(s) of a process unit so
that an
uncontaminated sample may then be taken for testing or analysis.
“Reactor”:
A vat, vessel
or other device
in which chemical reactions
take place.
“Reasonably Available Control Technology
(RACT)”:
The lowest
104--525
—22-
emission limitation that
an emission source
is capable of meeting by
the application
of control technology that
is reasonably available
considering technological and economic feasibility.
“Refinery Fuel Gas”:
Any gas which
is generated by a petroleum
refinery process unit and which
is combusted at the refinery,
including any gaseous mixture of natural gas and fuel gas.
“Refinery Unit, Process Unit or Unit”:
A set of components which are
a part of a basic process operation such as distillation,
hydrotreating, cracking or reforming of hydrocarbons.
“Residual Fuel Oil”:
Fuel oils of grade
No.
4,
5 and 6 as specified
in detailed requirements for fuel oils A.S.T.M. D—396-69
(1971).
“Restricted Area”:
The area within the boundaries
of any
“municipality”
as defined
in the Illinois Municipal
Code, plus a zone
extending one mile beyond the boundaries of any such municipality
having
a population of
1000 or more according to the latest
federal
census.
“Ringelmann Chart”:
The chart published and described
in the Bureau
of Mines,
U.S. Department of
Interior,
Information Circular 8333
(Revision of 1C7718) May
1,
1967,
or any adaptation thereof which has
been approved by the Agency.
“Roadway”:
Any
street, highway, road, alley, sidewalk, parking lot,
airport,
rail
bed or terminal, bikeway, pedestrian mall
or other
structure used for transportation purposes.
“Roll
Printing”:
The application
of words,
designs and pictures to
a
substrate usually by means
of
a series of hard rubber or metal
rolls
each
with
only
partial
coverage.
“Rotogravure
Printing”:
The application
of words, designs and
pictures
to
a substrate by means
of
a roll
printing technique
in
which the pattern
to
be
applied
is recessed relative to the non-image
area.
“Safety Relief
Valve”:
A valve which
is normally closed and which
is
designed to open in order
to relieve excessive pressures within
a
vessel
or pipe.
“Sandblasting”:
The use of
a mixture of
sand and air at high
pressures for cleaning and/or polishing any type of surface.
‘Sensor”:
A
device
that
measures
a
physical
quantity
or
the
change
in
a physical quantity such as temperature, pressure,
flow rate,
pH,
or
liquid
level.
“Set of Safety Relief Valves”:
One or more safety
relief valves
designed
to open in order to relieve excessive pressures
in the
same
vessel
or pipe.
104-
5D(~
—23—
“Sheet Basecoat”:
A coating applied to metal
when the metal
is
in
sheet form to serve
as either the exterior or interior of
a can for
either
two-piece or three-piece cans.
“Shotblasting”:
The use of a mixture
of any metallic or non—metallic
substance and air at high pressures for cleaning and/or polishing any
type of surface.
“Side-Seam Spray Coat”:
A coating applied to the seam of a three-
piece can.
“Smoke”:
Small gas-borne particles resulting from incomplete
combustion,
consisting predominately but not exclusively
of carbon,
ash and other combustible material, that form a visible plume
in the
air.
“Smokeless Flare”:
A combustion unit and the stack
to which
it
is
affixed
in which organic material achieves combustion
by burning
in
the atmosphere
such that the
smoke or other particulate matter
emitted
to the atmosphere from such combustion does not have an
appearance density
or shade darker that No.
1
of
the Ringlemann
Chart.
“Solvent Cleaning”:
The process
of cleaning soils from surfaces
by
cold cleaning, open top vapor degreasing or conveyorized degreasing.
“Specialty High Gloss Catalyzed Coating”:
Commercial contract
finishing of material prepared for printers and lithographers where
the finishing process uses
a solvent-borne coating, formulated with a
catalyst,
in a quantity of no more than 12,000 gallons/year as
supplied, where the coating machines are sheet fed and
the coated
sheets are brought
to
a minimum surface temperature of
1902.
F,
and
where the coated sheets are to achieve the minimum specular
reflectance index of 65 measured at
a 60 degree angle with
a gloss
meter.
“Splash
Loading”:
A method
of loading
a tank, railroad tank car,
tank truck or trailer
by use of other than a submerged loading pipe.
“Stack”:
A flue or conduit, free-standing or with exhaust port above
the roof of the building on which
it
is mounted,
by which air
contaminants are emitted into the atmosphere.
“Standard Conditions”:
A temperature of
702.
F
and a pressure of
14.7
pounds per square inch absolute
(psia).
“Standard Cubic Foot (scf)”:
The volume of one cubic foot of gas
at
standard conditions.
“Startup”:
The setting
in operation of an emission source for any
purpose.
“Stationary Emission Source”:
An emission
source which
is not
self-
propelled.
104-527
-24-
“Stationary Storage Tank”:
Any container of liquid or gas which
is
designed and constructed to remain at one
site.
“Submerged Loading Pipe”:
Any loading pipe the discharge opening
of
which
is entirely submerged when the liquid level
is
6 inches above
the bottom of the tank.
When applied to a tank which
is
loaded from
the side, any loading pipe the discharge of which
is entirely
submerged when the liquid level
is
18
inches or two times
the loading
pipe diameter, whichever is greater, above the bottom of the tank.
The definition shall
also apply to any loading pipe which
is
continuously submerged during loading operations.
“Sulfuric Acid Mist”:
Sulfuric acid mist as measured according to
the method specified in 35 Ill.
Adm. Code 214.101(b).
“Surface Condenser”:
A device which removes
a substance from a gas
stream
by reducing the temperature of the stream, without direct
contact between the coolant and the stream.
“Synthetic Organic Chemical or Polymer Manufacturing Plant”:
A plant
that produces, as intermediates or final products, one or more of the
chemicals or polymers
listed
in 35
Ill. Adm. Code 215.Appendix
D.
“Top Coat”:
A film of coating material applied
in
a multiple coat
operation other than the prime coat,
final repair coat or prime
surfacer coat.
“Transfer Efficiency”:
The weight or volume of coating adhering
to
the material being coated divided by the weight or volume of coating
delivered to the coating applicator and multiplied by
100 to equal
a
percentage.
“Tread
End
Cementing”:
The
application
of
a
solvent-based
cement
to
the tire tread ends.
“True Vapor Pressure”:
The equilibrium partial
pressure exerted
by
a
petroleum liquid
as determined
in accordance with methods described
in American Petroleum Institute Bulletin 2517,
“Evaporation Loss From
Floating Roof Tanks”
(1962).
“Turnaround”:
The procedure of
shutting down an operating refinery
unit,
emptying
gaseous
and
liquid
contents
to
do
inspection,
maintenance
and
repair
work,
and
putting
the
unit
back
into
production.
“Undertread Cementing”:
The application
of
a solvent-based cement
to
the underside of
a tire tread.
“Unregulated
Safety
Relief
Valve”:
A
safety
relief
valve
which
cannot
be actuated
by
a means other than high pressure
in the pipe or
vessel
which
it protects.
“Vacuum Producing System”:
Any reciprocating, rotary or centrifugal
104-
520
—25—
blower or compressor, or any
jet ejector or device that creates
suction from a pressure below atmospheric and discharges against
a
greater pressure.
“Valves Not Externally Regulated”:
Valves that have no external
controls, such as
in—line check valves.
“Vapor Balance System”:
Any combination of pipes or hoses which
creates a closed system between the vapor spaces of an unloading tank
and a receiving tank such that vapors displaced from the receiving
tank are transferred
to the tank being unloaded.
‘Vapor Collection System”:
All piping,
seals, hoses, connections,
pressure-vacuum vents, and other possible sources between the
gasoline delivery vessel
and the vapor processing unit and/or the
storage tanks
and vapor holder.
“Vapor Control
System”:
Any system that prevents release
to
the
atmosphere of organic material
in the vapors displaced from a tank
during the transfer of gasoline.
“Vapor-Mounted Primary Seal”:
A primary seal mounted with an
air
space bounded by the
bottom of the primary seal,
the tank wall, the
liquid surface and the floating roof.
“Vinyl Coating”:
The application of
a topcoat or printing to vinyl
coated fabric or vinyl sheets.
“Volatile Organic Liquid”:
Any liquid which contains volatile
organic material.
“Volatile Organic Material”:
Any organic material which participates
in atmospheric
photochemical reactions~unless specifically exempted from this
definition.
Volatile organic material emissions shall
be
measured
by the reference methods specified under 40 CFR 60,
Appendix A (1986)
(no future amendments or editions are
included), or,
if no reference method
is applicable, may be
determined
by mass balance calculations.
For purposes of this definition,
the following are not volatile
organic materials:
Chlorodifluoroethane
(HCFC-142b)
Chlorodifluoromethane
(CFC—22)
Chloropentafluoroethane (CFC-115)
Dichlorodifluoromethane (CFC-12)
Dichlorofluoroethane (HCFC—141b)
Dichlorotetrafluoroethane
(CFC-114)
Dichlorotrifluoroethane (HCFC-123)
Ethane
Methane
Dichloromethane (Methylene chloride)
104-520
—26—
Tetrafluoroethane fHFC—134a)
—3-r3-131-1,1,1—Trichloroethane
Meth
1
chloroform
Trichlorofluoromethane
CFC-1
Tn chlorotrif 1uoroethane
CFC—113
Trifluoromethane (FC-23)
“Volatile Petroleum Liquid”:
Any petroleum liquid with a true vapor
pressure that
is greater than 1.5 psia
(78 millimeters of mercury)
at
standard conditions.
“Wastewater (Oil/Water)
Separator”:
Any device or piece of equipment
which utilizes the difference
in density between oil
and water to
remove oil
and associated chemicals of water, or any device, such as
a flocculation tank or a clarifier, which removes petroleum derived
compounds from waste water.
“Weak Nitric Acid Manufacturing Process”:
Any acid producing
facility manufacturing nitric acid with
a concentration of
less than
70 percent by weight.
“Woodworking”:
The shaping,
sawing, grinding, smoothing, polishing
and making into products of any form or shape of wood.
(Source:
Amended
at
13
Ill.
Reg.
,
effective January
1,
1990)
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn,
Clerk of the
Illinois Pollution Control
Board,
hereby
certify that the above Opinion and Order was adopted on the /f~/—day
of
,
1989,
by a vote of
~
‘I,
‘---___)
.1
/~
/
~1JorothyM.
GunT,
Clerk
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board
104
~3fl