Oregon
State University researchers are gaining a more detailed understanding of
emissions from wood-burning stoves and developing technologies that allow
stoves to operate much more cleanly and safely, potentially limiting
particulate matter pollution by 95%.
The work has key implications for human
health as wood-burning stoves are a leading source of PM2.5 emissions
in the United States. PM2.5 refers
to fine particulate matter with a diameter of 2.5 micrometers or smaller
that can be inhaled deeply into the lungs and even enter the bloodstream.
Exposure to PM2.5 is
a known cause of cardiovascular disease and is linked to the onset and
worsening of respiratory illness.
Even though a relatively small number of
households use wood stoves, they are the U.S.'s third-largest source of
particulate matter pollution, after wildfire smoke and agricultural dust, said
Nordica MacCarty of the OSU College of Engineering.
Residential wood combustion, especially
the use of inefficient stoves, is also a significant source of other harmful
emissions including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, methane, benzene and formaldehyde.
"Wood is an affordable, local,
renewable, low-carbon fuel that should be an important part of the U.S. energy
mix, but it must be burned cleanly to effectively protect health,"
MacCarty said.
"Folks typically think of pollution
as coming from vehicles and industry, but household wood stoves are a larger
source—just a few smoky stoves can create a harmful effect on air quality in an
entire community."
MacCarty published a paper in the Journal
of the Air & Waste Management Association showing that 70% of the
pollution emitted from wood stove flues happens at two points in time: when a
stove is first lit, and when it's reloaded. MacCarty's team gained that
knowledge by developing a new monitoring technique and deploying equipment at a
collection of wood stove users' homes in rural Oregon.
According to the Environmental
Protection Agency, there are an estimated 6.5 million inefficient stoves in the U.S., most of them models that predate
EPA clean-burning standards. In all, there are roughly 10 million wood-burning
stoves in the country, or one for every 35 people.
"A lot of the older stoves are
essentially just metal boxes with chimneys and they don't incorporate modern
engineering principles to optimize heat transfer and combustion," said MacCarty, the Richard
& Gretchen Evans Professor of Humanitarian Engineering and an associate
professor of mechanical engineering.
"They have no catalysts or
secondary combustion to reduce emissions and lower the risk of creosote buildup
that can cause chimney fires."
MacCarty's group is developing automated
technologies that inject jets of primary and secondary air into the fire to
provide just the right amount of air and mixing at the right time and place in
the fire. Prototypes are showing about a 95% reduction in particulate matter
emissions compared to older models, she said.
The EPA has been reducing the allowable
PM2.5 emissions
rate regularly since the 1980s. In 2015 it was 4 grams per hour for cordwood
stoves, and five years later it was reduced to 2.5 grams per hour. Regulation
is driving innovation as stove makers improve their designs to meet
certification requirements, MacCarty said.
But wood stoves perform differently in
the lab than they do in real life, she noted, and stoves are certified based on
laboratory tests—and often designed to pass the tests, rather than to operate
well in someone's home.
"It's difficult to measure wood
stove emissions in the field, so there has been relatively little in-use
performance data available in the past to guide designs," MacCarty said.
"Our study introduces a new system that makes collecting real-world
emissions data more practical."
The project included Oregon State
undergraduate student Jonah Wald and was a collaboration between OSU and the
nonprofit Aprovecho Research Center based in Cottage Grove, Oregon. It builds
on OSU and Aprovecho's ongoing work on efficient combustion for cooking with wood in the developing world.
Roughly 2.7 billion people rely on open fires for cooking, MacCarty said, and her team has been designing efficient cook stoves for them to use instead.
Source: New technologies help wood-burning stoves burn more efficiently, produce less smoke
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