Successful Fireplaces in Tight Houses
A central location, a tall chimney, and controlled combustion are
the keys to a good burn.
By John Gulland
A version of this article first appeared in the May
1999 edition of the Journal of Light
Construction
Builders are beginning to hear
more complaints that traditional masonry fireplaces leak smoke and burn
too much wood for too little heat output. The fact is, open site-built
masonry fireplaces have always been filthy, smoky, and inefficient, but
these drawbacks were less noticeable in drafty, uninsulated houses.
Today’s tighter homes, however, are less forgiving, and their
occupants are less tolerant. |
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In addition, many modern fireplaces
are used strictly as a design element, and many designers have no
training in what makes one work. On top of that, many of the masons and
other heating contractors who build fireplaces carry over outdated
design traditions that are at the root of performance problems.
It doesn’t have to be that way. Building scientists now understand why
traditional fireplace designs perform poorly, and masons, manufacturers,
and hearth installers have responded with new products and techniques
that eliminate past problems.
In this article, I’ll discuss the common causes of fireplace problems,
and propose solutions for masonry fireplaces and heaters, as well as
less expensive, efficient factory-built wood-burning fireplaces.
Why Fireplaces Fail
When it comes to traditional open masonry fireplaces, masons
have perpetuated outdated ideas about the smoke shelf, the
mysteries of the smoke chamber, and the need for wide, but
shallow-throat dampers.
Today, it is clear that all three of these features work against
successful fireplace performance (see Figure 1).
The smoke shelf and shallow-throat damper both act as
obstacles to straight exhaust flow. And the smoke chamber
actually reduces the strength of a chimney’s draft by slowing
and cooling the fireplace exhaust. The performance of many brick
fireplaces can be improved immediately by removing the throat
damper and smoke shelf, and installing a chain-operated damper
at the top of the chimney. The results are a smooth, straight
path for the exhaust and less smoking when a fire burns. |
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| Figure 1. Traditional
fireplaces leak smoke into living space and don’t produce heat
efficiently. The curving smoke chamber, the throat damper and
the smoke shelf all decrease the strength and stability of the
chimney draft. |
Cold Hearth Syndrome
But the biggest source of trouble is the location of the
fireplace. Over the past 50 years of residential design,
fireplaces have migrated from the center of the house to a
position against the exterior walls, or even into chases that
are completely outside the house. This causes the cold hearth
syndrome, which is the source of most fireplace failures.
The most dramatic effect of a cold hearth is a predictable blast
of cold air when the fireplace doors are opened to build a fire.
Smoke fills the room when someone tries to light a
kindling fire. This is a common, even chronic, characteristic of
North American fireplaces.
The syndrome usually has its origin in the decision to place a
fireplace outside an exterior wall in a frame or brick chase
(Figure 2).
The cold outside air sucks warmth from the fireplace and
chimney structure, causing the temperature of the air in the
flue to drop. When the flue temperature is lower than the house
temperature, air begins to flow down the chimney and onto the
hearth. This is called a "cold backdraft" and contrary
to common belief, it does not happen because cold air is heavy
and falls down the chimney. The air is not falling — it is
being sucked down by the house. |

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| Figure 2. Chimneys built
on an outside wall, whether exposed or boxed with a chase, are prone to
backdrafting (top). One solution is to move the chase inside and to vent
it to the
interior so warm air can circulate (middle). The best solution
is to locate the system properly in the first place. The ideal
location is in the center of the house (bottom), because the
surrounding air will keep the chimney warm and the chimney will
penetrate the roof at its highest point. |
Just as hot exhaust in a chimney produces a pressure
difference called a draft, so the relatively warm air in a
house produces a pressure difference called "stack effect"
when it is cold outside The buoyant warm air rises, producing a slight low pressure zone
downstairs and higher pressure upstairs. Since most fireplaces are
installed on lower floors, they experience negative pressure due to
stack effect when it is cold outside. As soon as the air in the chimney
falls below room temperature, the house becomes a better chimney than
the chimney itself, and a cold backdraft gets started. The backdraft
tends to stabilize because as the chimney becomes full of cold air, it
cannot produce any draft to resist the suction of the house.
Stack Effect
A similar problem is caused by chimneys that fail to
extend higher than all of the living space in a house. A short chimney
cannot compete with a taller living space: the house makes more
stack effect than the chimney makes in draft when no fire burns. (Figure 3).
The higher pressure zone at the top of the house pushes air out through envelope leaks
such as windows, attic
access hatches and ceiling penetrations. The negative pressure low in the house
draws cold outside air in through low level leaks, one of which is the
fireplace. The house acts as a better
chimney than the chimney itself. In these cases, the house is said to have a
"taller effective stack" than the chimney. Air will tend to flow down
through the chimney, then loop through the house to exit through the attic or
upper-story wall leaks. To avoid these problems, chimney tops should always
penetrate the highest section of the conditioned living space. |
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| Figure 3. Chimneys built on outside walls are often too short
to counter the house’s stack effect and are prone to backdrafts. Moving
the chimney closer to the center of the house ensures a tall chimney with a
strong draft. |
In all cases, the cold hearth syndrome has two necessary ingredients without
which it will not occur: a misplaced chimney (outside or too short) and a fireplace located low in the
house. If we could move the fireplace and its chimney towards the center of a
house, the syndrome would vanish.
Unfortunately, moving a problem fireplace is not usually practical after it’s been
built, but you may still be able to minimize the cold hearth syndrome by keeping the chimney
from falling below room temperature. One way to do this is to trick the
fireplace into thinking it is inside. This requires building a sealed, insulated
chase using the same materials and techniques as sealed house wall construction. The chase
can then be
vented to the inside so that warm house air circulating in it will keep it at
about house temperature.
But a better solution is to design out cold hearth syndrome at the planning stage by
bringing the fireplace and chimney in from the cold. Ideally the fireplace
should be located centrally, in the heart of the home, so that the chimney will
penetrate the roof closer to its highest point. This makes for a tall chimney
that doesn't fall below room temperature, the two ingredients that form
the basis of reliable and stable draft.
Straight venting systems also work better, so elbows and offsets in the chimney
should be avoided.
Makeup Air
While improper design and location is a major cause of poor fireplace
performance, tighter house construction and powerful exhaust fans must share
some of the blame. By installing vapor barriers and using doors and windows that
have sealing gaskets, builders commonly reduce air leakage by more than 75%
compared with the standard construction of 20 years ago. And homes are now
commonly equipped with high-volume exhaust fans, such as those in downdraft
kitchen ranges, which can move air out of the house at a rate of 600 cubic feet
per minute (cfm) or more. Because tightly sealed house walls will not allow this
much air back into the house through leakage, these powerful fans create
negative pressure that can cause a chimney to backdraft and fill a house with
smoke (Figure 4).
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One standard fix for smoky fireplaces has been to install a supply of outdoor
air in the belief that air starvation is the root cause. While lack of
combustion air may be a problem in some cases, supplying outdoor air to the
fireplace through a duct is certainly not the cure. Two research studies, one
conducted in Canada on a series of factory-built fireplaces and one done in the
U.S. on a masonry fireplace, looked into the behavior of outdoor combustion air
supplies. In both studies, the fireplaces were installed within chambers that
could be depressurized continuously after a fire was lit. As the fires died down
to charcoal, technicians monitored carbon monoxide readings in the chamber to
see when exhaust began to spill from the fireplaces. Tests were done with and
without combustion air supplied from outside the depressurized chamber. No
consistent difference in spillage timing or amount could be found whether or not
outdoor air was supplied. |
Figure 4. In tight houses, depressurization from cooktop vents,
dryer vents, and other exhaust fans can cause fireplaces to backdraft and spill
smoke into the room. Instead of ducting combustion air to the fireplace, which
does nothing to change room pressure, add a makeup air system linked to the
exhaust fans. |
The reason is simple: Air flows to zones of lower pressure. If a room is
depressurized to the point where its low pressure overwhelms the chimney draft,
smoke will flow into the room. Obviously, ducting makeup air to the fireplace
doesn’t work. In fact, building code authorities are currently removing
mandatory outdoor air requirements for fireplaces that were added only a few
years ago, just before research debunked the idea.
Where a notorious air-guzzling downdraft kitchen range causes excessive
depressurization, many homeowners will simply not use their range exhaust when
the fireplace is burning. But another solution is to install a makeup
air system that is interlocked to the range exhaust switch. This kind of makeup
air system would force air into the house to compensate for the kitchen range
exhaust flow. This would prevent depressurization, and solve the smoky fireplace
problem.
Controlled Combustion
The design of the fireplace itself plays a big role in the level of satisfaction
it provides. The internal features that produce efficient, smokeless combustion
tend to be the same as those that produce reliable chimney venting and
trouble-free operation. To help guide fireplace design, here is a simple rule of
thumb that neatly summarizes a lot of expensive research: The more air a
fireplace demands for normal operation, the more fussy and spillage-susceptible
it will be.
Open fireplaces are the worst because they consume huge amounts of air — much
more than is needed for combustion — which cools the system, thereby reducing
draft. If you insist on a traditional fireplace, make sure to equip it with doors. Blocking most of the dilution air
to the firebox causes the average exhaust temperature to go way up.
Higher average temperature means stronger, more stable draft.
If you don't want glass doors or much heat, consider a gas
hearth. Do the same if the architect’s plans call for a hearth in an outside
chase situated at the low eaves of a cathedral roof. If you can't relocate the fireplace more centrally, you will
probably be
happier with a direct-vent gas fireplace.
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Several other alternatives to traditional masonry fireplaces are also available.
Stoves and fireplaces that meet Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
rules for low smoke emissions are the most resistant to leaking smoke into the
house because they create reliable draft (Figure 5).
These appliances are equipped with internal baffles, firebox insulation, and
strategically placed combustion air inlets, which produce a stable,
clean-burning fire, even at low heat output settings.
Don’t sacrifice performance for lower cost, however. Some cheap units are made
out of lighter, thinner materials, and are often connected to lightweight
air-cooled chimneys with flue diameters that are too small relative to the
fireplace opening. All of these cost-saving elements hurt performance and risk
spillage. |

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| Figure 5. This prefabricated metal fireplace is one
example of an EPA-certified controlled-combustion fireplace |
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For people who insist on a real brick or stone fireplace, a masonry heater is
a good option (Figure 6).
Masonry heaters use rapid combustion and heat stored in their massive structure
to achieve high efficiency and excellent resistance to spillage.
Both masonry heaters and advanced factory-built fireplaces solve the smoky fireplace problem because they get hot
and stay hot until the fire fades to a coal bed and goes out. Both types also
produce net efficiencies of more than 60%, a welcome feature during a winter
electrical power failure. In addition, high-quality prefabricated metal
fireplaces are much less expensive than traditional masonry fireplaces — often
less than half the cost, depending on the facade and mantel design (Figure 7). |

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| Figure 6. Masonry heaters, with their enormous thermal mass,
are designed to burn very hot, then store and slowly release heat. Although more
expensive than prefabricated metal fireplaces, they provide a reliable
high-performance wood-burning hearth. |
Trained Installers
In the last 20 years, building science research has clearly shown how fireplaces
behave in houses. These insights are now being promoted through professional
training programs. When planning for a traditional masonry or factory-built fireplace, or even a wood stove, use suppliers, installers, or masons who
understand the pitfalls of outdated ideas and impractical designs. Use fireplace
suppliers and installers who are graduates of one of these training programs. Hearth Education Foundation
in the U.S.
Wood Energy Technical Training
(WETT) in Canada
Masonry
Heater Association
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| Figure 7. Factory-built fireplaces don’t have to look metallic. The
masonry surround for this metal fireplace gives a traditional look along with
predictable performance, at a savings over a site-built masonry fireplace. |

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