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Comparison of Air Pollutant Emissions from Vaporizing and Air Atomizing Waste Oil Heaters
- Source :
- Journal of the Air Pollution Control Association. 33:683-687
- Publication Year :
- 1983
- Publisher :
- Informa UK Limited, 1983.
-
Abstract
- Information presented in this paper is directed to individuals concerned with emissions from combustion of waste crankcase oil for space heating. Studies were performed to characterize gaseous and particulate emissions and vaporizing pot solid residues resulting from the combustion of waste crankcase oil. Two types of waste oil burners were tested. One was a vaporizing oil burner rated at 35.2 kW (120,000 Btu/h heat input), and the other was an air atomizing oil burner rated at 73.3 kW (250,000 Btu/h heat input). Except for NOX and SOX, gaseous emissions were similar to those from conventional distillate oil combustion. NOX and SOX emissions were higher due to higher fuel nitrogen and sulfur concentrations. Waste oil from automotive use showed higher inorganic levels than crankcase oil used for truck engine lubrication. Both burner types discharged high levels of metallic species, but the air atomizing unit had much higher stack emission levels than did the vaporizing pot system. Also, particulate loading...
Details
- ISSN :
- 00022470
- Volume :
- 33
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of the Air Pollution Control Association
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........38e800c4271975324dcfef610052f790