Waste gas burners and flares are combustion devices that safely destroy gases and vapors that cannot be economically recovered or returned to process. They address two related hazards: accumulation of flammable gas mixtures that could reach explosive concentrations if vented uncontrolled, and release of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and hazardous air pollutants (HAPs) that violate emission regulations. Controlled combustion converts the waste gas to carbon dioxide and water vapor, removing both the explosion risk and the regulatory exposure.
Waste gas flows through supply piping to a burner head where a continuous pilot or automatic ignition initiates combustion. The burner holds a stable flame across a range of flow rates and compositions, with wind shields, retention rings, or an enclosed chamber protecting the flame from extinguishment. A flame monitor, typically a thermocouple or UV sensor, confirms ignition and triggers automatic re-ignition or an alarm if the flame is lost.
Burners and flares are sized from the maximum waste-gas flow rate, the gas heating value in BTU per cubic foot, and the required destruction efficiency. Configurations range from elevated stack-mounted flares to enclosed ground-level units, selected by site constraints, noise, and local permitting.
The terms are often used interchangeably, but in practice a burner is an enclosed or semi-enclosed device for continuous, low-visibility operation at or near ground level, while a flare is an open-flame device, often elevated, for intermittent or emergency vapor destruction. Both convert waste gas to combustion products safely and within emission limits.
Waste gas burners and flares are specified when a facility produces combustible waste gas that must be destroyed rather than vented:
Burner designs that hold stable combustion across wide turndown ratios accommodate the fluctuating volumes and heating values typical of digester gas, landfill gas, and intermittent process vents without constant operator adjustment.
Enclosed ground-level burners contain the flame within a refractory-lined chamber, eliminating visible flame and sharply reducing combustion noise compared to open elevated flares, satisfying community and permitting constraints.
Integrated pilot ignition, flame monitoring, and automatic re-ignition allow continuous unattended operation with alarm notification, reducing the operator attention needed to maintain compliant destruction.
Burner designs tested and documented to achieve 98% or greater destruction efficiency provide the performance data regulators require when issuing air-quality permits for new or modified waste-gas sources.
| Attribute | Elevated Flare | Enclosed Ground Burner | Utility Burner |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Combustion Type
|
Open flame at an elevated stack tip | Enclosed flame in a grade-level chamber | Semi-enclosed or open flame at low elevation |
|
Typical Application
|
Emergency relief, high-volume intermittent venting | Continuous destruction, community-sensitive sites | Routine low-volume biogas or process-gas flaring |
|
Visible Flame
|
Yes, visible from a distance | No, contained within the enclosure | Minimal, low-profile flame |
|
Noise Level
|
Higher, from open combustion and wind | Lower, the chamber attenuates combustion noise | Moderate, depends on configuration |
|
Destruction Efficiency
|
95–98% typical | 98%+ with proper design | 95–98% typical |
|
Gas Flow Range
|
High capacity, wide turndown | Moderate capacity, wide turndown | Low to moderate capacity |
|
Footprint
|
Small ground footprint, tall stack required | Larger ground footprint, no stack | Compact, minimal site preparation |
|
Recommendation
|
|
|
|
Consider an alternative when:
Ground-level enclosed combustion for continuous destruction of biogas, landfill gas, and process vapors with no visible flame and minimal noise.
Stack-mounted open flare for high-volume emergency and intermittent waste-gas destruction at petroleum, chemical, and biogas facilities.
Compact, low-volume gas destruction for wastewater digester gas, small biogas facilities, and routine process-vent applications.