2 research outputs found
Time-Resolved Characterization of Primary Emissions from Residential Wood Combustion Appliances
Primary emissions from a log wood burner and a pellet
boiler were
characterized by online measurements of the organic aerosol (OA) using
a high-resolution time-of-flight aerosol mass spectrometer (HR-TOF-AMS)
and of black carbon (BC). The OA and BC concentrations measured during
the burning cycle of the log wood burner, batch wise fueled with wood
logs, were highly variable and generally dominated by BC. The emissions
of the pellet burner had, besides inorganic material, a high fraction
of OA and a minor contribution of BC. However, during artificially
induced poor burning BC was the dominating species with ∼80%
of the measured mass. The elemental O:C ratio of the OA was generally
found in the range of 0.2–0.5 during the startup phase or after
reloading of the log wood burner. During the burnout or smoldering
phase, O:C ratios increased up to 1.6–1.7, which is similar
to the ratios found for the pellet boiler during stable burning conditions
and higher than the O:C ratios observed for highly aged ambient OA.
The organic emissions of both burners have a very similar H:C ratio
at a given O:C ratio and therefore fall on the same line in the Van
Krevelen diagram
Time-Resolved Characterization of Primary Emissions from Residential Wood Combustion Appliances
Primary emissions from a log wood burner and a pellet
boiler were
characterized by online measurements of the organic aerosol (OA) using
a high-resolution time-of-flight aerosol mass spectrometer (HR-TOF-AMS)
and of black carbon (BC). The OA and BC concentrations measured during
the burning cycle of the log wood burner, batch wise fueled with wood
logs, were highly variable and generally dominated by BC. The emissions
of the pellet burner had, besides inorganic material, a high fraction
of OA and a minor contribution of BC. However, during artificially
induced poor burning BC was the dominating species with ∼80%
of the measured mass. The elemental O:C ratio of the OA was generally
found in the range of 0.2–0.5 during the startup phase or after
reloading of the log wood burner. During the burnout or smoldering
phase, O:C ratios increased up to 1.6–1.7, which is similar
to the ratios found for the pellet boiler during stable burning conditions
and higher than the O:C ratios observed for highly aged ambient OA.
The organic emissions of both burners have a very similar H:C ratio
at a given O:C ratio and therefore fall on the same line in the Van
Krevelen diagram