Abstract
Wood fuels being a renewable source of primary energy have been considered environmentally friendly. However, wood combustion in domestic boilers is a source of air pollution. The lack of a dust collection device is the reason why flue gases emit a significant load of particulate pollutants into the air, including heavy metals. The aim of this research was to assess the environmental hazard caused by both emissions of heavy metals during wood combustion in domestic boilers and their chemical forms present in fly ash.From the various wood fuels burnt in domestic boilers, the fly ash selected for this study came from the combustion of briquettes of softwood from non-polluted areas, and from burning hardwood fuel from trees exposed to pollutants from heavy traffic. The wood fuels satisfy the quality demands determined in the EN 14961 Solid Biofuels - Fuel quality assurances. However, the concentrations of Cd, Cu, Pb and Zn in the fly ash are considerably higher than the appropriate limit values determined for soil improvers. Sequential extraction shows that Cd and Zn are associated mainly with the water leaching and carbonate fractions, regarded as mobile and bioavailable, and pose the potentially greatest hazard to the environment and human health. Cu, Mn and Pb associated with less mobile fractions may not pose a direct air quality hazard but, due to their high concentrations, medium-term and long-term effects on soils and surface and subsurface waters should be considered.
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