Study of the emission dynamic from residential wood combustion of pollutants of interest: PM, BC, OM, VOCs and levoglucosan - Ineris - Institut national de l'environnement industriel et des risques Accéder directement au contenu
Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2015

Study of the emission dynamic from residential wood combustion of pollutants of interest: PM, BC, OM, VOCs and levoglucosan

C. Pelletier
  • Fonction : Auteur
Roland Sarda-Esteve
  • Fonction : Auteur
Valérie Gros
  • Fonction : Auteur
Nicolas Bonnaire
  • Fonction : Auteur
Jean Sciare

Résumé

During this last decade in Europe, the use of wood burning for residential heating has significantly increased because it is a renewable source of energy.The determination of wood combustion pollutant emission factors (EFs) is usually performed by measurements directly carried out at the emission source. In these conditions, the results obtained are not representative of the PM chemical composition and concentrations observed in ambient air due to post-emission physicochemical processes: dilution, condensation and photo-oxidation of semi-volatile species. The main objective of the Champrobois project was to study the physicochemical evolution of the aerosol emitted by two different residential log wood stoves (RWS, old and modern = 4* and 5*) from emission until its introduction in ambient air, in controlled “real” conditions. Measurements were performed directly at the emission source, at about 1 m from the exhaust stack (very close field, dilution factor about 10-20) and at about 50 m from the emission exhaust (close field, dilution factor about 500). Using dedicated on-line instrumentation (TEOM, TEOM-FDMS, Aethalometer, ACSM, PTR-MS and PILSIC/ PAD) in the close field, one specific objective was to study the emission dynamic of PM, specific VOCs and biomass burning tracers [Black Carbon (BC) and levoglucosan] for different wood combustion conditions.Results obtained showed that the pollutant emission dynamic and concentrations were closely linked to the combustion conditions (wood load, output) and phases (lighting, pre-load). As an example, BC accounted for the main part of the solid fraction of PM2.5 during all the combustion process in nominal output conditions while, at the beginning and at the end of the combustion cycle, the emission of other species (i.e organic compounds) was major in reduced output conditions.We also showed that the emission of the widely used biomass burning molecular tracer, namely levoglucosan, seemed only emitted under specific combustion conditions (cold start, pre-load, reduced output, large wood load inducing a decrease of the RWS temperature). This result is of primary interest in terms of PM source apportionment and evaluation of the contribution of the biomass burning source on ambient air PM concentration levels.This work was supported by ADEME (French Environment and Energy Management Agency) and the French Ministry of Ecology, Sustainable Development and Energy (MEDDE).
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Dates et versions

ineris-01855186 , version 1 (07-08-2018)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : ineris-01855186 , version 1

Citer

Alexandre Albinet, Olivier Favez, Serge Collet, Jean-Eudes Petit, Federica Nalin, et al.. Study of the emission dynamic from residential wood combustion of pollutants of interest: PM, BC, OM, VOCs and levoglucosan. European Meeting on Environmental Chemistry (EMEC 16), Nov 2015, Torino, Italy. pp.31. ⟨ineris-01855186⟩
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