• Title/Summary/Keyword: 탄착물

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Organic Analysis of Charred Residues on the Pottery in the Proto-Three Kingdom from Joong-do Site, Chuncheon (춘천 중도 유적에서 출토된 원삼국시대 토기 탄착물에 대한 화학적 분석)

  • Kang, Soyeong;Jee, Sanghyun;Kim, Yun Ji;Chang, Hong Sun
    • Journal of Conservation Science
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    • v.29 no.4
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    • pp.437-444
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    • 2013
  • We studied for the chemical characterizations of the charred residues obtained from the ancient potteries in the Proto-Three Kingdom period from archaeological sites in Joong-do, Chuncheon. Organic components of the charred residues were extracted and analysed using mass spectrometry and infrared spectroscopy. Lipid profiles from these samples were not identified in gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Bulk stable isotope analyses of charred residues was used to infer an average values of the foods prepared. The average carbon isotope values (${\delta}^{13}C$) of the residues are $-14.7{\pm}2.8$‰ (ranging from -8.7‰ to -18.4‰, n=9), and nitrogen isotope values (${\delta}^{15}N$) are $6.2{\pm}1.1$‰ (ranging from -4.4‰ to -7.6‰, n=9). This is the first approach to analyse charred residues using stable isotopic method in Korea. Charred food residues on the interior surface of archaeological pottery can provide valuable information about pottery use and dietary habits of its population.

Study on Fuel Specificity and Harmful Air Pollutants Factor of Agglomerated Wood Charcoal (시중에 유통되고 있는 성형목탄의 연료특성과 유해인자에 대한 연구)

  • JEOUNG, Taek Yong;YANG, Seung Min;KANG, Seog Goo
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.48 no.2
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    • pp.253-266
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    • 2020
  • This study selected three types of agglomerated wood charcoal (Agglomerated wood charcoal with charcoal powder, Carbonized wood briquette, Ignition-type of perforated charcoal) that are in circulation in Korea among fuel-type wood products and analyzed the fuel characteristics, harmful substance content, and emissions of air pollutants generated by combustion. The first results showed that charcoal-grilled carbon, which is the raw material of charcoal, produced higher CO than saw-billed carbon. The second result is that the emission standards of air pollutants generated by the combustion of molded wood coal are not up to the emission standards of nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides in the entire product, compared with the emission criteria of the atmospheric environment preservation method (based on 2019, carbon monoxide: 200 ppm, nitrogen oxides, 150 ppm sulfur oxides: 100 ppm), but the carbon dioxide moulding and carbon dioxide levels were not up. Based on the analysis of combustion gas generated during combustion derived from this study, future research is needed for comparing with the emission standards of pellets, which are wood products for fuel, among the existing biomass burning standards and for reducing carbon monoxide generated during incomplete combustion of agglomerated wood charcoal.