Menu
0
Total price
0 €
PRICES include / exclude VAT
Homepage>BS 8576:2013 Guidance on investigations for ground gas. Permanent gases and Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs)
sklademVydáno: 2013-04-30
BS 8576:2013 Guidance on investigations for ground gas. Permanent gases and Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs)

BS 8576:2013

Guidance on investigations for ground gas. Permanent gases and Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs)

Format
Availability
Price and currency
Anglicky Secure PDF
Immediate download
375.67 €
You can read the standard for 1 hour. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 1 hour
37.57 €
You can read the standard for 24 hours. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 24 hours
112.70 €
Anglicky Hardcopy
In stock
375.67 €
Označení normy:BS 8576:2013
Počet stran:120
Vydáno:2013-04-30
ISBN:978 0 580 75667 2
Status:Standard
DESCRIPTION

BS 8576:2013


This standard BS 8576:2013 Guidance on investigations for ground gas. Permanent gases and Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) is classified in these ICS categories:
  • 13.080.01 Soil quality and pedology in general

This British Standard provides guidance on the monitoring and sampling of ground gases. It covers volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and permanent gases such as carbon dioxide, methane and oxygen. It is intended to be read in conjunction with BS 10175.

Guidance is not provided on:

  • risk evaluation and characterization;

NOTE 1 Guidance can be found in CLR 11 [3], CIRIA C665 [4], CIRIA C682 [5] and the Ground Gas Handbook [6].

  • selection and design of protective measures;

  • the verification of protective measures, although the site investigation methodologies described can be used when appropriate;

  • the sampling of atmospheric gases;

  • monitoring and sampling for radon.

NOTE 2 Radon occurs naturally at varying concentrations in large parts of the United Kingdom. It is commonly present in mine gas and can also be released from groundwater when it is extracted from the ground. It can also arise from deposited wastes such as those from the nuclear industry, phosphorus slags, and coal ash. Its importance lies in the fact that the risks associated with exposure to it are serious and its effects on the human condition are backed by extensive epidemiological information. There are established or draft International Standards for investigation and determination of radon in soils (BS ISO 18589 series) and in air (BS ISO 11665‑1). The latter provides guidance on analysis of historic records, site reconnaissance, identification of preferential migration pathways, development of a sampling plan and how to measure radon in air once it has been emitted from the ground (see Annex B for further information). At the time of publication of this standard, the committee are not aware of any international standards or other authoritative guidance on the measurement and sampling of radon in the ground analogous to that provided in this standard for permanent gases and VOCs. The state-of-the-art is not sufficiently developed in the UK to provide such guidance as part of this standard but some preliminary guidance is provided for information in Annex B.

NOTE 3 The term “permanent gas” (3.10) is used rather than “bulk gas” as used in much UK guidance. The two are not synonyms. “Permanent gas” is an accepted international term in use for over 100 years. Its usage does not indicate any relationship between the proportion of a gas present and its properties in the way that the terms “bulk gas” and “trace gas” do. These terms were originally used in connection with “landfill gas”. “Permanent gas” is considered more appropriate for the range of sources covered by this standard.

NOTE 4 ”Ground gas” has the same meaning as “soil gas” as defined in BS ISO 11074, i.e. “gas and vapours in the pore spaces of soils”.