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Creosote & chimney fires:
what you must know:
Fireplaces and wood stoves are designed to safely contain
wood-fueled fires, while providing heat for a home. The chimneys
that serve them have the job of expelling the by-products
of combustion - the substances given off when wood burns.
As these substances exit the fireplace or wood stove, and
flow up into the relatively cooler chimney, condensation occurs.
The resulting residue that sticks to the inner walls of the
chimney is called creosote. Creosote is black or brown in
appearance. It can be crusty and flaky ... tar-like, drippy
and sticky ... or shiny and hardened. Often, all forms will
occur in one chimney system.
Whatever form it takes, creosote is highly combustible.
If it builds up in sufficient quantities - and catches fire
inside the chimney flue- the result will be a chimney fire.
Although any amount of creosote can burn, sweeps are concerned
when creosote builds up in sufficient quantities to sustain
a long, hot, destructive chimney fire.
Certain conditions encourage the buildup of creosote, restricted
air supply, unseasoned wood and cooler-than-normal chimney
temperatures are all factors that can accelerate the buildup
of creosote on chimney flue walls.
Air supply: The air supply on fireplaces may be restricted
by closed glass doors or by failure to open the damper wide
enough to move heated smoke up the chimney rapidly (the longer
the smoke's "residence time" in the flue, the more likely
is it that creosote will form). A wood stove's air supply
can be limited by closing down the stove damper or air inlets
too soon and too much, and by improperly using the stovepipe
damper to restrict air movement.
Burning unseasoned firewood: Because so much energy
is used initially just to drive off the water trapped in the
cells of the logs - burning green wood keeps the resulting
smoke cooler, as it moves through the system, than if dried,
seasoned wood is used.
Cool flue temperatures: In the case of wood stoves,
fully-packed loads of wood (that give large cool fires and
eight or 10 hour burn times) contribute to creosote buildup.
Condensation of the unburned by-products of combustion also
occurs more rapidly in an exterior chimney, for example, than
in a chimney that runs through the center of a house and exposes
only the upper reaches of the flue to the elements.
Chimney fire articles provided by the Chimney
Safety Institute of America.
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