In the current work, we provide measurements of size-resolved particle number concentration (PNC), particle mass concentration (PMC), lung-deposited surface area (LDSA), and black carbon (BC) concentration for three biomass fired hydronic heaters during operation in four different combustion conditions. The appliances include one woodchip-fueled hydronic heater and two outdoor cordwood-fueled hydronic heaters. The operating conditions included startup, low output, high output, and burnout. Measurements were made using a custom dilution sampling system and a suite of commercially available, time-resolved, ambient aerosol measurement instrumentation. The PNC, as measured using an Dekati Electrical Low Pressure Impactor+ (ELPI), had operating condition mean values ranging between 4.1 and 52 million particles per cubic centimeter (#/cm). The highest reported PNC occurred during the startup condition in all cases. Calculating the particle size distribution measured across each operating phase for the same instrument gave geometric mean diameters () in the range of 0.080-0.256 µm. The largest per appliance was nearly always attributable to the startup condition (for hydronic heater 1, startup ranked second).We did not observe the same trends when we transformed the ELPI PNC to PMC and particle surface area concentration estimates across operating conditions, suggesting PNC and are highly variable. Furthermore, simultaneous measurements of PNC, PMC, and PSAC using instrumentation with different working principles gave varying results, potentially suggesting that particles of different composition and morphology are produced under different combustion conditions.: In this work we compare the results from testing of 3 biomass fired hydronic heaters including one chip-fired appliance and two cordwood-fired appliances. The emissions from these appliances were made across four operating conditions and using three different non-regulatory emissions metrics. This work: describes the difference between chip and cordwood fired units and the effect of operating condition on emissions across the three emissions metrics.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10962247.2022.2049398 | DOI Listing |
J Air Waste Manag Assoc
July 2022
Department of Materials Science and Chemical Engineering, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York, USA.
Residential biomass combustion is a source of carbonaceous aerosol. Inefficient combustion, particularly of solid fuels produces large quantities of black and brown carbon (BC and BrC). These particle types are important as they have noted effects on climate forcing and human health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Air Waste Manag Assoc
July 2022
Brookhaven National Laboratory, Interdisciplinary Science Department, Energy Conversion Group, Upton, Massachusetts, USA.
In the current work, we provide measurements of size-resolved particle number concentration (PNC), particle mass concentration (PMC), lung-deposited surface area (LDSA), and black carbon (BC) concentration for three biomass fired hydronic heaters during operation in four different combustion conditions. The appliances include one woodchip-fueled hydronic heater and two outdoor cordwood-fueled hydronic heaters. The operating conditions included startup, low output, high output, and burnout.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Air Waste Manag Assoc
July 2022
Chief Scientist at NESCAUM, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Many believe that certification testing of residential wood heat appliances should provide data indicative of installed performance. Operationally, test methods typically only assess steady-state emissions and fail to include other typical conditions for batch appliances such as start-up. From a fueling perspective, protocols should ensure a consistent approach reflecting common use practices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Air Waste Manag Assoc
July 2022
Brookhaven National Laboratory, Interdisciplinary Science Department, Energy Conversion Group, Upton, NY, USA.
This study investigated how heat demand and fuel loading affect the emissions from outdoor wood-fired hydronic heaters by testing two such appliances using an integrated-duty cycle test method. This test included transient operating conditions, such as cold and hot-starts and modulation between 15 and 100% of maximum rated output. Emission values indicate transient operating conditions produce higher emissions than steady state operation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Air Waste Manag Assoc
July 2022
Department of Materials Science & Chemical Engineering, State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA.
The use of wood as a fuel for home heating is a concern from an environmental health and safety perspective as biomass combustion appliances emit high concentrations of particulate matter. Wood burning significantly contributes to wintertime particulate matter concentrations in many states in the northern United States. Of particular concern are outdoor wood-fired hydronic heaters.
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