Field Measurement of Emission Factors of PM, EC, OC, Parent, Nitro-, and Oxy- Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons for Residential Briquette, Coal Cake, and Wood in Rural Shanxi, China

Guofeng Shen(Peking University), Shu Tao(Peking University), Siye Wei(Peking University), Yuanchen Chen(Peking University), Yanyan Zhang(Peking University), Huizhong Shen(Peking University), Ye Huang(Peking University), Dan Zhu(Peking University), Chenyi Yuan(Peking University), Haochen Wang(Peking University), Yafei Wang(China Population and Development Research Center), Lijun Pei(China Population and Development Research Center), Yilan Liao(China Population and Development Research Center), Yonghong Duan(Shanxi Agricultural University), Bin Wang(Peking University), Rong Wang(Peking University), Yan Lv(Peking University), Wei Li(Peking University), Xilong Wang(Peking University), Xiaoying Zheng(China Population and Development Research Center)
Environmental Science & Technology
February 18, 2013
Cited by 260

Abstract

Air pollutants from residential solid fuel combustion are attracting growing public concern. Field measured emission factors (EFs) of various air pollutants for solid fuels are close to the reality and urgently needed for better emission estimations. In this study, emission factors of particulate matter (PM), organic carbon (OC), elemental carbon (EC), and various polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) from residential combustions of coal briquette, coal cake, and wood were measured in rural Heshun County, China. The measured EFs of PM, OC, and EC were 8.1-8.5, 2.2-3.6, 0.91-1.6 g/kg for the wood burnt in a simple metal stove, 0.54-0.64, 0.13-0.14, 0.040-0.0041 g/kg for the briquette burned in an improved stove with a chimney, and 3.2-8.5, 0.38-0.58, 0.022-0.052 g/kg for the homemade coal cake combusted in a brick stove with a flue, respectively. EFs of 28 parent PAHs, 4 oxygenated PAHs, and 9 nitro-PAHs were 182-297, 7.8-10, 0.14-0.55 mg/kg for the wood, 14-16, 1.7-2.6, 0.64-0.83 mg/kg for the briquette, and 168-223, 4.7-9.5, 0.16-2.4 mg/kg for the coal cake, respectively. Emissions from the wood and coal cake combustions were much higher than those for the coal briquette, especially true for high molecular weight PAHs. Most EFs measured in the field were higher than those measured in stove combustions under laboratory conditions.


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