Indoor Air Quality and Unvented Natural Gas Appliances
Battelles Atmospheric Science and Applied Technology department recently completed an extensive study to explore the nature of trace organic and inorganic chemicals emitted by these appliances, including individual hydrocarbons, formaldehyde, other carbonyl compounds, nitrous acid, nitric acid, sulfur dioxide, nitrous oxide, nitric oxide, hydrogen cyanide, carbon dioxide, formic acid, acetic acid, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and ultrafine particles. Emissions were quantified both under normal and improper operating conditions. The data have been used to calculate emission factors for each trace contaminant. These emission factors can be used for indoor air quality modeling or empirical calculations to estimate the effect of the emissions on indoor air quality. These estimates can be used in turn for risk assessments. The emission factors from different appliances and different operating conditions can also be used by consumers to select appliances and conditions which minimize the air quality impact of natural gas appliance use.
The experimental portion of the project was designed to measure emissions of a large number of organic and inorganic chemicals from four different types of unvented natural gas appliances. These included a range burner, a convective space heater, a radiant space heater and a set of gas fireplace logs. All of the appliances are promoted for unvented use indoors. The approach used to measure the trace chemicals in the appliance emissions involved operating each appliance in a 17.3 m3 environmental chamber filled with clean humidified air. The emissions were captured and diluted in the chamber, and measured by a suite of instruments.
The primary results from this study are emission factors for a large number of pollutants. Emission factors for some of the contaminants apparently have not been measured before. The data can be used to examine the effect on emissions of factors such as firing rate, cooking load (for the range burner), convective vs. radiant design (for the space heaters), burner cap design, natural gas leakage, improper configuration (stacked logs), obstructed air flow, and vitiation of the combustion air. This study greatly expands the data available on unvented natural gas appliance emissions. The results can be used to help identify conditions which lead to unacceptable emissions, identify practices that could be implemented to reduce occupant exposure to emissions, and can also be used to improve residential indoor air quality. The final report is available from the Gas Technology Institute as GRI-01/0097. For further information, contact Chet Spicer at (614)424-5319, spicerc@battelle.org. |
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