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Portrait of Joakim Pagels

Joakim Pagels

Senior Lecturer

Portrait of Joakim Pagels

Emissions of ultrafine particles from five types of candles during steady burn conditions

Author

  • Berit B Rasmussen
  • Kai Wang
  • Johan G Karstoft
  • Søren N Skov
  • Morten Køcks
  • Christina Andersen
  • Aneta Wierzbicka
  • Joakim Pagels
  • Peter B Pedersen
  • Marianne Glasius
  • Merete Bilde

Summary, in English

Emissions from candles are of concern for indoor air quality. In this work, five different types of pillar candles were burned under steady burn conditions in a new laboratory scale system for repeatable and controlled comparison of candle emissions (temperature ~25°C, relative humidity ~13%, O2 >18%, air exchange rate 1.9 h-1 ). Burn rate, particle number concentrations, mass concentrations, and mode diameters varied between candle types. Based on the results, the burning period was divided in two phases: initial (0-1 h) and stable (1-6 h). Burn rates were in the range 4.4-7.3 and 4.7-7.1 g/h during initial and stable phase, respectively. Relative particle number emissions, mode diameters, and mass concentrations were higher during the initial phase compared to the stable phase for a majority of the candles. We hypothesize that this is due to elevated emissions of wick additives upon ignition of the candle together with a slightly higher burn rate in the initial phase. Experiments at higher relative humidity (~40%) gave similar results with a tendency toward larger particle sizes at the higher relative humidity. Chemical composition with respect to inorganic salts was similar in the emitted particles (dry conditions) compared to the candlewicks, but with variations between different candles.

Department/s

  • Ergonomics and Aerosol Technology
  • Metalund
  • Centre for Healthy Indoor Environments
  • NanoLund: Center for Nanoscience

Publishing year

2021-07-01

Language

English

Pages

1084-1094

Publication/Series

Indoor Air

Volume

31

Issue

4

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Topic

  • Health Sciences

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0905-6947