Abstract
Abstract. Emission of organic aerosol (OA) from wood combustion is not well constrained;
understanding the governing factors of OA emissions would aid in explaining
the reported variability. Pyrolysis of the wood during combustion is the
process that produces and releases OA precursors. We performed controlled
pyrolysis experiments at representative combustion conditions. The conditions
changed were the temperature, wood length, wood moisture content, and wood
type. The mass loss of the wood, the particle concentrations, and light-gas
concentrations were measured continuously. The experiments were repeatable as
shown by a single experiment, performed nine times, in which the real-time
particle concentration varied by a maximum of 20 %. Higher
temperatures increased the mass loss rate and the released concentration of
gases and particles. Large wood size had a lower yield of particles than the
small size because of higher mass transfer resistance. Reactions outside the
wood became important between 500 and 600 ∘C. Elevated
moisture content reduced product formation because heat received was shared
between pyrolysis reactions and moisture evaporation. The thermophysical
properties, especially the thermal diffusivity, of wood controlled the
difference in the mass loss rate and emission among seven wood types. This
work demonstrates that OA emission from wood pyrolysis is a deterministic
process that depends on transport phenomena.
Funder
Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences
Cited by
5 articles.
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