Management of smoke from prescribed fires requires knowledge of fuel quantity and the amount and composition of the smoke produced by the fire to minimize adverse impacts on human health. A five-year study produced new emissions information for more than 100 trace gases and particulate matter in smoke for fuel types found in the southern United States of America using state-of-the-art instrumentation in both laboratory and field experiments. Emission factors for flaming, smoldering, and residual smoldering were developed. Agreement between laboratory and field-derived emission factors was generally good in most cases. Reference spectra of over 50 wildland fire gas-phase smoke components were added to a publicly-available database to support identification via infrared spectroscopy. Fuel loading for the field experiments was similar to previously measured fuels. This article summarizes the results of a five-year study to better understand the composition of smoke during all phases of burning for such forests.
Revised: February 10, 2016 |
Published: March 4, 2015
Citation
Weise D., T.J. Johnson, and J. Reardon. 2015.Particulate and trace gas emissions from prescribed burns in southeastern U.S. fuel types: Summary of a 5-year project.Fire Safety Journal 74.PNNL-SA-109744.doi:10.1016/j.firesaf.2015.02.016