Author(s):
Gonçalves, Cátia
; Alves, Célia
; Fernandes, Ana Patrícia
; Monteiro, Cristina
; Tarelho, Luís
; Evtyugina, Margarita
; Pio, Casimiro
Date: 2012
Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/6317
Origin: RIA - Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro
Subject(s): Biomass burning; Fireplace; Woodstove; PM2.5; GC-MS; Organic tracers
Description
The aim of this study is the further characterisation of PM2.5 emissions from the residential wood
combustion of common woods grown in Portugal. This new research extends to eight the number of
biomass fuels studied and tries to understand the differences that the burning appliance (fireplace versus
woodstove) and the combustion temperature (cold and hot start) have on emissions. Pinus pinaster
(Maritime pine), Eucalyptus globulus (eucalypt), Quercus suber (cork oak), Acacia longifolia (Golden
wattle), Quercus faginea (Portuguese oak), Olea europea (Olive), Quercus ilex rotundifolia (Holm oak) and
briquettes produced from forest biomass waste were used in the combustion tests. Determinations
included fine particle emission factors, carbonaceous content (OC and EC) by a thermaleoptical transmission
technique and detailed identification and quantification of organic compounds by gas chromatographyemass
spectrometry. Fine particle emission factors from the woodstove were lower than
those from the fireplace. For both combustion appliances, the OC/EC ratio was higher in “cold start” tests
(1.56 0.95 for woodstove and 2.03 1.34 for fireplace). These “cold start” OC/EC values were,
respectively, for the woodstove and the fireplace, 51% and 69% higher than those obtained in “hot start”
experiments. The chromatographically resolved organics included n-alkanes, n-alkenes, PAHs, n-alkanals,
ketones, n-alkanols, terpenoids, triterpenoids, phenolic compounds, phytosterols, alcohols, n-alkanoic
acids, n-di-acids, unsaturated acids and alkyl esters of acids. The smoke emission rate and composition
varied widely depending on fuel type, burning appliance and combustion temperature.