Champion Wyatt M, Connors Lea, Montoya Lupita D
a Department of Civil , Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder , Boulder , CO , USA.
J Air Waste Manag Assoc. 2017 Sep;67(9):1020-1035. doi: 10.1080/10962247.2017.1334717. Epub 2017 May 25.
Most homes in the Navajo Nation use wood as their primary heating fuel, often in combination with locally mined coal. Previous studies observed health effects linked to this solid-fuel use in several Navajo communities. Emission factors (EFs) for common fuels used by the Navajo have not been reported using a relevant stove type. In this study, two softwoods (ponderosa pine and Utah juniper) and two high-volatile bituminous coals (Black Mesa and Fruitland) were tested with an in-use residential conventional wood stove (homestove) using a modified American Society for Testing and Materials/U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (ASTM/EPA) protocol. Filter sampling quantified PM (particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter ≤2.5 μm) and organic (OC) and elemental (EC) carbon in the emissions. Real-time monitoring quantified carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO), and total suspended particles (TSP). EFs for these air pollutants were developed and normalized to both fuel mass and energy consumed. In general, coal had significantly higher mass EFs than wood for all pollutants studied. In particular, coal emitted, on average, 10 times more PM than wood on a mass basis, and 2.4 times more on an energy basis. The EFs developed here were based on fuel types, stove design, and operating protocols relevant to the Navajo Nation, but they could be useful to other Native Nations with similar practices, such as the nearby Hopi Nation.
Indoor wood and coal combustion is an important contributor to public health burdens in the Navajo Nation. Currently, there exist no emission factors representative of Navajo homestoves, fuels, and practices. This study developed emission factors for PM, OC, EC, CO, and CO using a representative Navajo homestove. These emission factors may be utilized in regional-, national-, and global-scale health and environmental models. Additionally, the protocols developed and results presented here may inform on-going stove design of the first EPA-certified wood and coal combination stove.
纳瓦霍族的大多数家庭以木材作为主要取暖燃料,通常还会与当地开采的煤炭混合使用。先前的研究观察到在几个纳瓦霍族社区中,这种固体燃料的使用与健康影响有关。纳瓦霍人使用的常见燃料的排放因子(EFs)尚未根据相关炉灶类型进行报告。在本研究中,使用改良的美国材料与试验协会/美国环境保护局(ASTM/EPA)协议,对两种软木(黄松和犹他刺柏)和两种高挥发烟煤(黑山煤和弗鲁特兰煤)在使用中的家用传统木炉(家用炉灶)上进行了测试。过滤器采样对排放物中的颗粒物(空气动力学直径≤2.5μm的颗粒物)、有机碳(OC)和元素碳(EC)进行了量化。实时监测对一氧化碳(CO)、二氧化碳(CO₂)和总悬浮颗粒物(TSP)进行了量化。针对这些空气污染物制定了排放因子,并根据燃料质量和消耗的能量进行了归一化处理。总体而言,在所研究的所有污染物方面,煤炭的质量排放因子显著高于木材。特别是,煤炭排放的颗粒物,按质量计算平均比木材多10倍,按能量计算多2.4倍。这里制定的排放因子基于与纳瓦霍族相关的燃料类型、炉灶设计和操作协议,但它们可能对其他有类似做法的原住民部落有用,比如附近的霍皮族。
室内木材和煤炭燃烧是纳瓦霍族公共卫生负担的一个重要因素。目前,不存在代表纳瓦霍家用炉灶、燃料和做法的排放因子。本研究使用具有代表性的纳瓦霍家用炉灶制定了颗粒物、有机碳、元素碳、一氧化碳和二氧化碳的排放因子。这些排放因子可用于区域、国家和全球尺度的健康和环境模型。此外,这里制定的协议和呈现的结果可能为美国环境保护局首个认证的木材和煤炭组合炉灶正在进行的炉灶设计提供参考。