Abstract

Comparison of gaseous and particulate emissions from the combustion of hard (beech) and soft (spruce) wood in four types (old and modern) boilers used for household/residential heating was studied. The boilers were run with three different heat outputs, i.e. nominal (85–100%) and two reduced outputs (60–70% and 35–45%), to cover the expected usage of these boilers in real households during different outdoor air winter temperatures. Gaseous emission factors (CO2, CO, NOx, OGC – organic gaseous compounds), particulate pollutants (n-alkanes and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) and particulate organic markers (monosaccharide anhydrides, methoxyphenols and diterpenoids) were determined. In general, modern-type boilers emitted lower amounts of products of incomplete combustion than those old-type boilers. The emission factors (EFs) of total suspended particles varied between 562 and 2150 mg kg−1 (beech logs, the oldest-type boiler), and 69.1 and 118 mg kg−1 (spruce pellets, the modern-type boiler). The trends between the heat outputs of boilers and the EFs of particulate organic compounds/markers were observed for all boilers (especially the automatic boiler) with some exceptions and mostly increased with a decreasing output of boilers. The ratios levoglucosan/mannosan varied in the range of 13.4–18.6 for the combustion of beech, and 2.11–4.16 for the combustion of spruce.

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