326 Ind. Admin. Code 20-13.1-2

Current through December 4, 2024
Section 326 IAC 20-13.1-2 - Definitions

Authority: IC 13-14-8; IC 13-17-3-4; IC 13-17-3-11

Affected: IC 13-11; IC 13-15; IC 13-17

Sec. 2.

In addition to the definitions in IC 13-11, 326 IAC 1-2, and 326 IAC 20-1-3, the following definitions apply throughout this rule:

(1) "Affected emission unit" means any of the following emission units at a secondary lead smelter:
(A) Blast, reverberatory, rotary, and electric furnaces.
(B) Refining kettles.
(C) Agglomerating furnaces.
(D) Dryers.
(E) Process fugitive emissions sources.
(F) Buildings containing lead-bearing materials.
(G) Fugitive dust sources.
(2) "Affirmative defense" means, in the context of an enforcement proceeding, a response or defense put forward by a defendant, regarding which the defendant has the burden of proof, and the merits of which are independently and objectively evaluated in a judicial or administrative proceeding.
(3) "Agglomerating furnace" means a furnace used to melt flue dust that is collected from a baghouse into a solid mass.
(4) "Bag leak detection system" means an instrument that is capable of monitoring particulate matter loadings in the exhaust of a baghouse in order to detect bag failures. A bag leak detection system includes, but is not limited to, an instrument to monitor relative particulate matter loadings that operates on:
(A) triboelectric;
(B) light scattering; or
(C) transmittance.
(5) "Battery breaking area" means the plant location at which lead-acid batteries are broken, crushed, or disassembled and separated into components.
(6) "Blast furnace" means a smelting furnace consisting of a vertical cylinder atop a crucible, into which lead-bearing charge materials are introduced at the top of the furnace and combustion air is introduced through openings in the refractory lining and shell of the furnace at the bottom of the cylinder and that:
(A) uses coke as a fuel source; and
(B) is operated at a temperature in the combustion zone of greater than nine hundred eighty (980) degrees Celsius so that that lead compounds are chemically reduced to elemental lead metal.
(7) "Blast furnace charging location" means the physical opening through which raw materials are introduced into a blast furnace.
(8) "Collocated blast furnace and reverberatory furnace" means operation at the same location of a blast furnace and a reverberatory furnace where the vent streams of the furnaces are mixed before cooling, with the volumetric flow rate discharged from the blast furnace being equal to or less than that discharged from the reverberatory furnace.
(9) "Dryer" means a chamber that is heated and that is used to remove moisture from lead bearing materials before they are charged to a smelting furnace.
(10) "Dryer transition equipment" means the junction between a dryer and the charge hopper or conveyor, or the junction between the dryer and the smelting furnace feed chute or hopper located at the ends of the dryer.
(11) "Electric furnace" means a smelting furnace consisting of a vessel into which reverberatory furnace slag is introduced and that uses electrical energy to heat the reverberatory furnace slag to a temperature of greater than nine hundred eighty (980) degrees Celsius so that lead compounds are reduced to elemental lead metal.
(12) "Fugitive dust source" means a stationary source of hazardous air pollutant emissions at a secondary lead smelter that is not associated with a specific process or process fugitive vent or stack. Fugitive dust sources include, but are not limited to, the following:
(A) Roadways.
(B) Storage piles.
(C) Lead-bearing material handling transfer points.
(D) Lead-bearing material transport areas.
(E) Lead-bearing material storage areas.
(F) Other lead-bearing material process areas.
(G) Other lead-bearing material process buildings.
(13) "Furnace and refining/casting area" means any area of a secondary lead smelter where:
(A) smelting furnaces are located;
(B) refining operations occur; or
(C) casting operations occur.
(14) "Lead alloy" means an alloy in which the predominant component is lead.
(15) "Lead-bearing material" means material with a lead content equal to or greater than five (5) milligrams per liter (mg/l) as measured by United States Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) Method 1311 "Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Method", U.S. EPA Publication SW-846*. Under Method 1311, only materials with at least one hundred (100) parts per million (ppm) lead will be considered to be lead-bearing.
(16) "Leeward wall" means the furthest exterior wall of a total enclosure that is opposite the windward wall.
(17) "Maintenance activity" means any of the following routine maintenance and repair activities that could generate fugitive lead dust:
(A) Replacement or repair of refractory, or any internal or external part of equipment used to process, handle, or control lead-containing materials.
(B) Replacement of any duct section used to convey lead-containing exhaust.
(C) Metal cutting or welding that penetrates the metal structure of any equipment, and its associated components, used to process lead-containing material so that lead dust within the internal structure or its components can become fugitive lead dust.
(D) Resurfacing, repair, or removal of ground, pavement, concrete, or asphalt.
(18) "Materials storage and handling area" means any area of a secondary lead smelter where lead-bearing materials are stored or handled between process steps including, but not limited to areas in which materials are stored in open piles, bins, or tubs, and areas in which material is prepared for charging to a smelting furnace. Lead-bearing materials in these areas include, but are not limited to, the following:
(A) Broken battery components.
(B) Reverberatory furnace slag.
(C) Flue dust.
(D) Dross.
(19) "Natural draft opening" means any permanent opening in an enclosure that:
(A) remains open during operation of a secondary lead smelter; and
(B) is not connected to a duct in which a fan is installed.
(20) "New emissions unit" means any affected emissions unit at a secondary lead smelter that was constructed or reconstructed after May 19, 2011. The term does not include a building that is constructed for the purpose of controlling fugitive emissions from an existing emissions unit.
(21) "Partial enclosure" means a structure comprised of walls or partitions on at least three (3) sides or three-quarters (3/4) of the perimeter surrounding stored materials or process equipment to prevent the entrainment of particulate matter into the air.
(22) "Pavement cleaning" means the use of vacuum equipment, water sprays, or a combination thereof to remove dust or other accumulated material from the paved areas of a secondary lead smelter.
(23) "Plant roadway" means any area of a secondary lead smelter outside of a total enclosure that is subject to vehicle traffic, including traffic by forklifts, front-end loaders, or vehicles carrying whole batteries or cast lead ingots. The term does not include employee and visitor parking areas, provided they are not subject to traffic by vehicles carrying lead-bearing materials.
(24) "Pressurized dryer breaching seal" means a seal system connecting the dryer transition pieces that is maintained at a higher pressure than the inside of the dryer.
(25) "Process fugitive emissions source" means a source of hazardous air pollutant emissions at a secondary lead smelter that is associated with lead smelting or refining, but is not the primary exhaust stream from a smelting furnace, and is not a fugitive dust source. Process fugitive emissions sources include, but are not limited to, the following:
(A) Smelting furnace charging points.
(B) Smelting furnace lead and slag taps.
(C) Refining kettles.
(D) Agglomerating furnaces.
(E) Drying kiln transition pieces.
(26) "Process vent" means the following:
(A) Furnace vents.
(B) Dryer vents.
(C) Agglomeration furnace vents.
(D) Vents from battery breakers.
(E) Vents from buildings containing lead-bearing material.
(F) Any ventilation system controlling lead emissions.
(27) "Refining kettle" means an open-top vessel that is constructed of cast iron or steel and is indirectly heated from below and contains molten lead for the purpose of refining and alloying the lead, including the following:
(A) Pot furnaces.
(B) Receiving kettles.
(C) Holding kettles.
(28) "Reverberatory furnace" means a refractory-lined furnace that uses one (1) or more flames to heat the walls and roof of the furnace and lead-bearing scrap to a temperature of greater than nine hundred eighty (980) degrees Celsius so that lead compounds are chemically reduced to elemental lead metal.
(29) "Rotary furnace," or "rotary reverberatory furnace" means a furnace consisting of a refractory-lined chamber that rotates about a horizontal axis and that uses one (1) or more flames to heat the walls of the furnace and lead-bearing scrap to a temperature of greater than nine hundred eighty (980) degrees Celsius so that lead compounds are chemically reduced to elemental lead metal.
(30) "Secondary lead smelter" means any source where lead-bearing scrap material is recycled into elemental lead or lead alloys by smelting, including, but not limited to, lead-acid batteries.
(31) "Shutdown" means the period when no lead-bearing materials are being fed to the furnace and smelting operations have ceased during which the furnace is cooled from steady-state operating temperature to ambient temperature.
(32) "Smelting" means the chemical reduction of lead compounds to elemental lead or lead alloys through processing in high-temperature furnaces at a temperature of greater than nine hundred eighty (980) degrees Celsius, including, but not limited to, the following:
(A) Blast furnaces.
(B) Reverberatory furnaces.
(C) Rotary furnaces.
(D) Electric furnaces.
(33) "Startup" means the period when no lead-bearing materials have been fed to the furnace and smelting operations have not yet commenced during which the furnace is heated from ambient temperature to steady-state operating temperature.
(34) "Total enclosure" means a containment building that is completely enclosed with a floor, walls, and a roof to prevent exposure to the elements and to assure containment of lead-bearing material with limited openings to allow access and egress for people and vehicles. The total enclosure must provide an effective barrier against fugitive dust emissions so that the:
(A) direction of air flow through any openings is inward; and
(B) enclosure is maintained under constant negative pressure.
(35) "Vehicle wash" means a device for removing dust and other accumulated material from the wheels, body, and underside of a vehicle to prevent the inadvertent transfer of lead-contaminated material to another area of a secondary lead smelter or to public roadways.
(36) "Wet suppression" means the use of water, water combined with a chemical surfactant, or a chemical binding agent to prevent the entrainment of dust into the air from fugitive dust sources.
(37) "Windward wall" means the exterior wall of a total enclosure that is most impacted by the wind in its most prevailing direction determined by a wind rose using available data from the closest representative meteorological station.

*This document is incorporated by reference. Copies may be obtained from the Government Printing Office, 732 North Capitol Street NW, Washington, D.C. 20401 or are available for review and copying at the Indiana Department of Environmental Management, Office of Air Quality, Indiana Government Center North, Tenth Floor, 100 North Senate Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204.

326 IAC 20-13.1-2

Air Pollution Control Division; 326 IAC 20-13.1-2; filed Jan 30, 2013, 12:34 p.m.: 20130227-IR-326110774FRA
Readopted filed 10/18/2024, 2:09 p.m.: 20241113-IR-326230809RFA