Aerosol emissions factors from traditional biomass cookstoves in India: insights from field measurements
Residential solid biomass cookstoves are important sources of aerosol emissions in India. Cookstove emissions rates are largely based on laboratory experiments conducted using the standard water-boiling test, but real-world emissions are often higher owing to different stove designs, fuels, and...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2017-11-01
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Series: | Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics |
Online Access: | https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/17/13721/2017/acp-17-13721-2017.pdf |
Summary: | Residential solid biomass cookstoves are important sources of
aerosol emissions in India. Cookstove emissions rates are largely based on
laboratory experiments conducted using the standard water-boiling test, but
real-world emissions are often higher owing to different stove designs,
fuels, and cooking methods. Constraining mass emissions factors (EFs) for
prevalent cookstoves is important because they serve as inputs to bottom-up
emissions inventories used to evaluate health and climate impacts. Real-world
EFs were measured during winter 2015 for a traditional cookstove
(<i>chulha</i>) burning fuel wood, agricultural residue, and
dung from different regions of India. Average (±95 % confidence
interval) EFs for fuel wood, agricultural residue, and dung were (1) PM<sub>2.5</sub> mass: 10.5
(7.7–13.4) g kg<sup>−1</sup>, 11.1 (7.7–15.5) g kg<sup>−1</sup>, and 22.6
(14.9–32.9) g kg<sup>−1</sup>, respectively; (2) elemental carbon (EC): 0.9
(0.6–1.4) g kg<sup>−1</sup>, 1.6 (0.6–3.0) g kg<sup>−1</sup>, and 1.0
(0.4–2.0) g kg<sup>−1</sup>, respectively; and (3) organic carbon (OC): 4.9
(3.2–7.1) g kg<sup>−1</sup>, 7.0 (3.5–12.5) g kg<sup>−1</sup>, and 12.9
(4.2–15.01) g kg<sup>−1</sup>, respectively. The mean
(±95 % confidence
interval) OC ∕ EC mass ratios were 6.5 (4.5–9.1), 7.6 (4.4–12.2), and
12.7 (6.5–23.3), respectively, with OC and EC quantified by the
IMPROVE_A thermal-optical reflectance protocol. These
real-world EFs are higher than those from previous laboratory-based
measurements. Combustion conditions have larger effects on EFs than the
fuel types. We also report the carbon mass fractions of our aerosol samples
determined using the thermal-optical reflectance method. The mass fraction
profiles are consistent between the three fuel categories but markedly
different from those reported in past literature – including the source
profiles for wood stove PM<sub>2.5</sub> emissions developed as inputs to receptor
modeling studies conducted by the Central Pollution Control Board of India.
Thermally stable OC (OC3 in the IMPROVE_A protocol) contributed nearly 50 % of the total carbon mass
for emissions from all fuels. |
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ISSN: | 1680-7316 1680-7324 |