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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF FEBRUARY 16,1995 PSA#1285U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Contracts Management Division
(NCCM-SM), Research Triangle Park, NC 27711 B -- DEVELOPMENT AND EVALUATION OF AN INNOVATIVE CHEMICAL REACTION
MECHANISM FOR USE IN AIR QUALITY SIMULATION MODELING SOL D500237M1 POC
Sue Miller, Contract Specialist, (919) 541-3052/Janice F. White,
Contracting Officer, (919) 541-3052. The US Environmental Protection
Agency is seeking sources to develop, evaluate, apply, and deliver an
innnovative chemical reaction mechanism and associated variable-order
numerical solver for use in air quality modeling. This is a continuing
effort based on the innovative approach developed under Cooperative
Agreement with the University of North Carolina (UNC), School of Public
Health. This notice is intended to test the validity of EPA's belief
that UNC School of Public Health is the only offeror who can provide
this requirement. Under Cooperative Agreement, UNC School of Public
Health has developed a unique approach for representing chemistry in
resource-intensive air quality simulation models (AQSMs). The
anticipated contract will include developing a combined chemical
reaction mechanism/numerical solver and evaluating the performance of
the mechanism against 300 to 400 experiments that are currently
included in EPA's data base of indoor and outdoor smog chamber
experiments. This contract will also include performing 25 - 50 smog
chamber experiments to acquire data for those VOC-NOx systems for which
the existing data are insufficient to adequately test the chemical
mechanism. Any interested party who believes they can provide this
requirement should submit qualification statements, in writing, to the
above address within 15 days from the date of this notice. Firms who
have developed concepts for representing chemistry that they feel merit
similar or competitive evaluation, must establish the potential merits
of their concepts. Firms must have a record of past accomplishments in
the development of chemical reaction mechanisms and numberical solvers,
the coding of reaction mechanisms into resource-intensive AQSMs, the
evaluation of reaction mechanisms against data collected in indoor and
outdoor smog chamber facilities, and the execution and analysis of
smog chamber experiments. Responses will be viewed as nonresponsive
and, therefore, unacceptable unless offerors demonstrate that they
currently have a viable approach that allows them to track all of the
important individual organic reactants, intermediates and products that
participate in photochemical smog formation, including the individual
branched and straight-chained alkane species, the internal and terminal
olefins (including isoprene), the mono-, di-, and tri-alkylated
benzenes, the most commonly emitted terpenes, and all simple aldehydes,
ketones, di-carbonyls, carboxylic acids, organic nitrates (including
the acylperoxy nitrates), and organic peroxides. The resource
requirements of the new mechanism and solver must be such that they do
not unduly increase computational demands of sophisticated AQSMs. This
requirement is intended to evaluate an existing, but new concept. It is
not for development of a new concept. A solicitation is not available.
(0045) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0021 19950215\B-0008.SOL)
B - Special Studies and Analyses - Not R&D Index Page
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