Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 6 OF 11

Main Title Fine Particle Emissions from Residual Fuel Oil Combustion: Characterization and Mechanisms of Formation.
Author Linak, W. P. ; Miller, C. A. ; Wendt, J. O. ;
CORP Author Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC. National Risk Management Research Lab.
Publisher 4 Aug 2000
Year Published 2000
Stock Number ADA452850
Additional Subjects Combustion ; Particulates ; Fuel oil ; Emission ; Particle size ; Residuals ; Symposia ; Component reports ; Pm(Particulate matter) ; Psd(Particulate size distribution)
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NTIS  ADA452850 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 9p
Abstract
The characteristics of particulate matter (PM) emitted from residual fuel oil combustion in two types of combustion equipment were compared. A small commercial 732 kW rated fire-tube boiler yielded a weakly bimodal particulate size distribution (PSD) with over 99% of the mass contained in a broad coarse mode and only a small fraction of the mass in an accumulation mode consistent with ash vaporization. Bulk samples collected and classified by a cyclone indicate that 30% to 40% of the total particulate emissions were less than 2.5mum aerodynamic diameter (PM2.5). The coarse mode PM was rich in char, indicating relatively poor carbon burnout, although calculated combustion efficiencies exceeded 99%. This characteristic behavior is typical of small fire-tube boilers. Larger, utility-scale units firing residual oil were simulated using an 82 kW rated laboratory-scale refractory-lined combustor. Particulate matter emissions from this unit were in good agreement with published data including published emission factors. These data indicated that the refractory-lined combustor produced less total but more fine particulate emissions, as evident from a single unimodal PSD centered at.