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research article

Quantifying functional group compositions of household fuel-burning emissions

Li, Emily Y.
•
Yazdani, Amir  
•
Dillner, Ann M.
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April 22, 2024
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques

Globally, billions of people burn fuels indoors for cooking and heating, which contributes to millions of chronic illnesses and premature deaths annually. Additionally, residential burning contributes significantly to black carbon emissions, which have the highest global warming impacts after carbon dioxide and methane. In this study, we use Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) to analyze fine-particulate emissions collected on Teflon membrane filters from 15 cookstove types and 5 fuel types. Emissions from three fuel types (charcoal, kerosene, and red oak wood) were found to have enough FTIR spectral response for functional group (FG) analysis. We present distinct spectral profiles for particulate emissions of these three fuel types. We highlight the influential FGs constituting organic carbon (OC) using a multivariate statistical method and show that OC estimates by collocated FTIR and thermal-optical transmittance (TOT) are highly correlated, with a coefficient determination of 82.5 %. As FTIR analysis is fast and non-destructive and provides complementary FG information, the analysis method demonstrated herein can substantially reduce the need for thermal-optical measurements for source emissions.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.5194/amt-17-2401-2024
Web of Science ID

WOS:001205993500001

Author(s)
Li, Emily Y.
Yazdani, Amir  
Dillner, Ann M.
Shen, Guofeng
Champion, Wyatt M.
Jetter, James J.
Preston, William T.
Russell, Lynn M.
Hays, Michael D.
Takahama, Satoshi  
Date Issued

2024-04-22

Publisher

Copernicus Gesellschaft Mbh

Published in
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
Volume

17

Issue

8

Start page

2401

End page

2413

Subjects

Physical Sciences

•

Reflectance Tor Measurements

•

Aerosol Mass-Spectrometry

•

Infrared-Spectroscopy

•

Atmospheric Aerosols

•

Organic Aerosols

•

Ftir Spectroscopy

•

Elemental Carbon

•

United-States

•

Particles

•

Spectra

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LAPI  
FunderGrant Number

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Frderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Air Quality Planning

Office of Research and Development for Quality Assurance

Available on Infoscience
May 1, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/207735
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