I am curious about the chlorides involved in the trash (plastics)? Would not there be a dioxin problem?
John Miedema BioLogical Carbon, LLC _____ From: Gasification [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mark Ludlow Sent: Saturday, November 10, 2012 2:24 AM To: 'Discussion of biomass pyrolysis and gasification' Subject: Re: [Gasification] Sweden's trash project / Japanese trash project Where does the rest of the “trash” go? Just, “Somewhere”? RE: Conservation of Mass. Mark From: Gasification [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Terry & Susan Layman Sent: Friday, November 09, 2012 4:08 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [Gasification] Sweden's trash project / Japanese trash project The Swedish are probably using the same system the Japanese invented. Leave it to the Japanese to perfect a system, that virtually elimanates trash. Each day Iwamoto's <http://superstoneclean.com/waste-treatment-solutions/> "Super Stone Clean Waste Treatment'' processors can take a 20 ton pile of common garbage, and reduce it to less than 8 gallons of what they call biochar. Just watch their video. then you can see first hand the machine and the process. I, wouldn't classify it as BioChar, but it looks to me like ashes. Reduces waste volume from 1/100th to 1/3000th of original input: 1,000kg waste →300g ashes ( 2,200 lbs waste to 10.58 oz's ashes ) This is probably the most advanced system for Gasification.
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