Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8863929 | Atmospheric Environment | 2018 | 23 Pages |
Abstract
Particulate and gaseous emissions of two medium-sized district heating facilities (400â¯kW, fueled with miscanthus, and 1.5â¯MW, fueled with wood chips) were characterized for different operational conditions, and compared to previously obtained results for household wood and pellet stoves. SO2 and NOx emission factors (reported in mg MJFuelâ1) were found to not only depend on fuel sulfur/nitrogen content, but also on combustion appliance type and efficiency. Emission factors of SO2, NOx, and PM (particulate matter) increased with increasing load. Particle chemical composition did not primarily depend on operational conditions, but varied mostly with combustion appliances, fuel types, and flue gas cleaning technologies. Black carbon content was decreasing with increasing combustion efficiency; chloride content was strongly enhanced when burning miscanthus. Flue gas cleaning using an electrostatic precipitator caused strong reduction not only in total PM, but also in the fraction of refractory and semi-refractory material within emitted PM1. For the impact of facilities on their surroundings (immissions) not only their total emissions are decisive, but also their stack heights. In immission measurements downwind of the two facilities, a plume could only be observed for the 400â¯kW facility with low (11â¯m) stack height (1.5â¯MW facility: 30â¯m), and measured immissions agreed reasonably well with predicted ones. The impact of these immissions is non-negligible: At a distance of 50â¯m from the facility, apart from CO2, also plume contributions of NOx, ultrafine particles, PM1, PM10, poly-aromatic hydrocarbons, and sulfate were detected, with enhancements above background values of 2-130%.
Keywords
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric Science
Authors
Friederike Fachinger, Frank Drewnick, Reto Gieré, Stephan Borrmann,