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AbstractAbstract
[en] The promulgation of phased emissions standards for woodstoves by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) in 1984, the Colorado Department of Health in 1985 and the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 1988, caused woodstove manufacturers to develop new noncatalytic products designed to comply with these regulations. This paper looks at the various low emission noncatalytic wood combustion engineering concepts/principles/ideas that led to the development of a clean burning inside-out flame (preheated air is injected into a gas stream containing the fuel to be burned) that has allowed manufacturers to consistently develop units with weighted average emission rates below the EPA Phase II (1990) standard for catalytic woodstoves and as low as 2.1 g/hr
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Chow, J.C.; Ono, D.M. (eds.); 571 p; 1992; p. 589-592; Air ampersand Waste Management Association; Pittsburgh, PA (United States); International specialty conference: PM-10 standards and nontraditional particulate source controls; Scottsdale, AZ (United States); 12-15 Jan 1992; Air ampersand Waste Management Association, P.O. Box 15230, Pittsburgh, PA 15230 (United States)
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Book
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Conference
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