Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Publication Date
9-20-1996
Volume
101
Issue
D15
Disciplines
Biochemistry | Chemistry | Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Abstract
A series of nine large-scale, open fires was conducted in the Intermountain Fire Sciences Laboratory (IFSL) controlled-environment combustion facility. The fuels were pure pine needles or sagebrush or mixed fuels simulating forest-floor, ground fires; crown fires; broadcast burns; and slash pile burns. Mid-infrared spectra of the smoke were recorded throughout each fire by open path Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy at 0.12 cm−1 resolution over a 3 m cross-stack pathlength and analyzed to provide pseudocontinuous, simultaneous concentrations of up to 16 compounds. Simultaneous measurements were made of fuel mass loss, stack gas temperature, and total mass flow up the stack. The products detected are classified by the type of process that dominates in producing them. Carbon dioxide is the dominant emission of (and primarily produced by) flaming combustion, from which we also measure nitric oxide, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and most of the water vapor from combustion and fuel moisture. Carbon monoxide is the dominant emission formed primarily by smoldering combustion from which we also measure carbon dioxide, methane, ammonia, and ethane. A significant fraction of the total emissions is unoxidized pyrolysis products; examples are methanol, formaldehyde, acetic and formic acid, ethene (ethylene), ethyne (acetylene), and hydrogen cyanide. Relatively few previous data exist for many of these compounds and they are likely to have an important but as yet poorly understood role in plume chemistry. Large differences in emissions occur from different fire and fuel types, and the observed temporal behavior of the emissions is found to depend strongly on the fuel bed and product type.
DOI
10.1029/96JD01800
Rights
Copyright 1996 by the American Geophysical Union
Recommended Citation
Yokelson, Robert J.; Griffith, David W. T.; and Ward, Darold E., "Open-Path Fourier Transform Infrared Studies of Large-Scale Laboratory Biomass Fires" (1996). Chemistry and Biochemistry Faculty Publications. 44.
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/chem_pubs/44