A chimney is a system for venting hot flue gases or smoke from a boiler, stove, furnace or fireplace to the outside atmosphere. They are typically almost vertical to ensure that the hot gases flow smoothly, drawing air into the combustion through the chimney effect (also known as the stack effect). The space inside a chimney is called a flue. Chimneys may be found in buildings, steam locomotives and ships (for the latter, the US term is smokestack (colloquially, stack) and the UK term is funnel). Chimneys are tall to increase their draw of air for combustion and to disperse pollutants in the flue gases over a greater area so as to reduce the pollutant concentrations in compliance with regulatory or other limits.
Romans used tubes inside the walls to draw smoke out of bakeries but real chimneys appeared only in northern Europe in the 12th century. Industrial chimneys became common in the late 18th century.
Chimneys have traditionally been built of brick, both in small and large buildings. Early chimneys were of a simple brick construction. Later chimneys were constructed by placing the bricks around tile liners. To control downdrafts venting caps (often called chimney pots) with a variety of designs are sometimes placed on the top of chimneys.
In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the methods use to extract lead from its ore produced large amounts of toxic fumes. In the north of England, long near-horizontal chimneys were built, often more than 3 km (2 miles) long, which typically terminated in a short vertical chimney in a remote location where the fumes would cause less harm. Lead and silver deposits formed on the inside of these long chimneys, and periodically workers would be sent along the chimneys to scrape off these valuable deposits.
Due to brick's limited ability to handle transverse loads, chimneys in houses were often built in a "stack", with a fireplace on each floor of the house sharing a single chimney, often with such a stack at the front and back of the house. Today's central heating systems have made chimney placement less critical, and the use of non-structural double-wall metal piping allows it to be bent around obstructions and through walls. In fact, modern high-efficiency furnaces do not require a chimney and can vent sideways through a wall.
The 300 metre chimney at Sasol Three consists of a 26 metre diameter windshield with four 4.6 metre diameter concrete flues which are lined with refractory bricks built on rings of corbels spaced at 10 metre intervals. The reinforced concrete can be cast by conventional formwork or sliding formwork. The height is to ensure the pollutants are dispersed over a wider area to meet legislative or safety requirements.
When coal, oil, natural gas, wood or any other fuel is combusted in a stove, oven, fireplace, hot water boiler or industrial furnace, the hot combustion product gases that are formed are called flue gases. Those gases are generally exhausted to the ambient outside air through chimneys or industrial flue gas stacks (sometimes referred to as smokestacks).
The combustion flue gases inside the chimneys or stacks are much hotter than the ambient outside air and therefore less dense than the ambient air. That causes the bottom of the vertical column of hot flue gas to have a lower pressure than the pressure at the bottom of a corresponding column of outside air. That higher pressure outside the chimney is the driving force that moves the required combustion air into the combustion zone and also moves the flue gas up and out of the chimney. That movement or flow of combustion air and flue gas is called "natural draught/draft", "natural ventilation", "chimney effect", or "stack effect". The taller the stack, the more draught or draft is created.
Designing chimneys and stacks to provide the correct amount of natural draught or draft involves a number design factors, many of which require trial-and-error reiterative methods.
As a "first guess" approximation, the following equation can be used to estimate the natural draught/draft flow rate by assuming that the molecular mass (i.e., molecular weight) of the flue gas and the external air are equal and that the frictional pressure and heat losses are negligible:Natural Ventilation Lecture
A characteristic problem of chimneys is they develop deposits of creosote on the walls of the structure when used with wood as a fuel. Some types of wood, such as pine, generate more creosote than others. Deposits of this substance can interfere with the airflow and more importantly, they are flammable and can cause dangerous chimney fires if the deposits ignite in the chimney. Thus, it is recommended — and in some countries even mandatory — that chimneys be inspected annually and cleaned on a regular basis to prevent these problems. The workers who perform this task professionally are called chimney sweeps.
Masonry (brick) chimneys have also proved particularly susceptible to crumbling during earthquakes. Government housing authorities in quake-prone cities like San Francisco and Los Angeles now recommend building new homes with stud-framed chimneys around a metal flue. Bracing or strapping old masonry chimneys has not proved to be very effective in preventing damage or injury from earthquakes. Perhaps predictably, a new industry provides "faux-brick" facades to cover these modern chimney structures.
Other problems include "spalling" brick, in which moisture seeps into the brick and then freezes, cracking and flaking the brick and loosening mortar seals.
In some cases the chimneys of power stations are used also as pylons. However this type of construction is not very common, because of corrosion problems of conductor cables.
| Chimney | Year | Country | Town | Pinnacle height | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GRES-2 Power Station | 1987 | Kazachstan | Ekibastusz | 420 m | 1378 ft | Tallest chimney |
| Inco Superstack | 1971 | Canada | Copper Cliff | 385 m | 1263 ft | Tallest freestanding chimney |
| Homer City Generating Station | 1977 | USA | Homer City, Pennsylvania | 371 m | 1219 ft | |
| Kennecott Smokestack | 1974 | USA | Tooele, Utah | 370.4 m | 1246 ft | |
| Mitchell Power Plant | 1971 | USA | Moundsville, West Virginia | 368 m | 1207 ft | |
| Trbovlje Chimney | 1976 | Slovenia | Trbovlje | 364 m | 1207 ft | |
| Endesa Termic | 1974 | Spain | La Coruña | 356 m | 1207 ft | |
| Syrdarya Power Plant | 1975 | Uzbekhistan | Syrdarya | 350 m | 1149 ft | |
| Teruel Power Plant | ? | Spain | Teruel | 343 m | 1149 ft | |
| Plomin Power Station | ? | Croatia | Plomin | 340 m | 1149 ft | |
| Power Station Westerholt | 1997 | Germany | Gelsenkirchen | 338 m | 1107 ft | |
| Mountaineer Power Plant | 1980 | USA | New Haven, West Virginia | 336 m | 1102 ft | |
| TETs5 | ? | Ukraina | Kharkiv | 330 m | 1078 ft | |
| Maritza East Power Station | 1977- 1980 | Bulgaria | Stara Zagora | 325 m | 1063 ft | |
| Power Station Jaworno | ? | Poland | Jaworno | 300 m | 984 ft | |
| Power Station Belchatow | 1979 | Poland | Belchatow | 300 m | 984 ft | |
| Power Station Kozienice | ? | Poland | Kozienice | 300 m | 984 ft | |
| Power Station Warszawa-Kawcyn | ? | Poland | Warszawa- Kawcyn | 300 m | 984 ft | |
| Navajo Generating Station | ? | USA | Page, Arizona | 236 m | 774 ft | |
| Anaconda Smelter Stack | 1919 | USA | Anaconda, Montana | 178 m | 585 ft | Tallest freestanding brick chimney |
Architectural elements | Industrial processes | Industrial furnaces
Komín | Schornstein | Chimenea | Kamentubo | Cheminée | ארובה | Schoorsteen | 煙突 | Cheunm'née | Komin | Dimnik | Skorsten