2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2010.07.026
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Characterisation of PM10 emissions from woodstove combustion of common woods grown in Portugal

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Cited by 141 publications
(100 citation statements)
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“…McDonald et al (2000) obtained an OC/EC ratio of 3.9 for softwood and 7.9 for hardwood in a woodstove. Gonçalves et al (2010) reported ratios ranging from 0.9 for maritime pine PM 10 emissions to 4.4 for the smoke of cork oak emitted from the combustion in a "chimney type" stove. Higher OC/EC ratios have been reported for lowtemperature combustion in conventional fireplaces and stoves, confirming that particulate matter from these appliances are dominated by OC (Bølling et al, 2009), while higher EC mass fractions in smoke particles from the combustion of woody biomass in more efficient modern small scale units (modern logwood stoves with secondary air and automated air supply, and pellet stoves) contributed to lower OC/EC ratios, sometimes comparable to those from vehicular emissions.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…McDonald et al (2000) obtained an OC/EC ratio of 3.9 for softwood and 7.9 for hardwood in a woodstove. Gonçalves et al (2010) reported ratios ranging from 0.9 for maritime pine PM 10 emissions to 4.4 for the smoke of cork oak emitted from the combustion in a "chimney type" stove. Higher OC/EC ratios have been reported for lowtemperature combustion in conventional fireplaces and stoves, confirming that particulate matter from these appliances are dominated by OC (Bølling et al, 2009), while higher EC mass fractions in smoke particles from the combustion of woody biomass in more efficient modern small scale units (modern logwood stoves with secondary air and automated air supply, and pellet stoves) contributed to lower OC/EC ratios, sometimes comparable to those from vehicular emissions.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2). The carbon content of particle emissions from the combustion of Portuguese woods was compared with that determined by Fine et al (2001Fine et al ( , 2002Fine et al ( , 2004b and by Gonçalves et al (2010) in Table 2. The OC values obtained by Fine et al (2002) for the fireplace combustion of selected American wood species are about two times higher than those obtained in our study.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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