Dean 

I think you are describing below only a TLUD that has no control over the 
primary air supply. Or one that has a turn down ratio of unity. We should be 
able to do much better. 

I urge having a means of controlling the primary air supply. If one is 
intending to consume the produced char, there will be a mighty small flame at 
the end or a huge flame at the beginning. 

There are many ways to control the primary air - at low cost. 


Ron 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Dean Still" <[email protected]> 
To: "Discussion of biomass cooking stoves" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Thursday, December 2, 2010 10:30:33 PM 
Subject: Re: [Stoves] K Smith Article in Energy for Sustainable Development 

Hi All, 


Adding more air holes in the bottom of the fuel chamber in a TLUD allows 
pellets to burn up completely. If users want bio-char they just have to have 
fewer holes. Then the char is made since there is not enough air to support 
burning it. 


If it is tuned (!), the TLUD is very low in PM when it does not make smoke when 
starting and finishing the burn. CO is also generally low. In the well tuned 
TLUD we generally see around 7g of CO and 400mg of PM during the WBT compared 
to a carefully operated open fire at 55g CO and 2300mg PM. Generally the TLUD 
makes less smoke at the finish with more air holes because all the wood burns 
up without making smoke. 


Isn't it great that a TLUD can be operated in both char making and no char 
making modes? 
The user can choose whether they want greater fuel efficiency or to make an 
agricultural additive. 


Best, 


Dean 


On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 7:29 PM, Richard Stanley < [email protected] > 
wrote: 



Hi Ron, long time eh? 
Let me respond in kind, as much as I can at least... 



On Nov 29, 2010, at 7:55 PM, [email protected] wrote: 




See some questions/notes below on your message today. You said: 


" I would buy the one that burned some form of densified non wood biomass 
"cleanly" ...... 

[RWL1: Those of us who are promoting char-producing stoves believe that they 
are much cleaner than those that only combust. The usual low-cost stoves in 
developing countries almost universally use only wood (with some still-minor 
use of your briquettes of course). For those new to the subject, the difference 
is whether there is a single air supply or two. Does anyone reading this think 
that char-making stoves are not inherently cleaner? 
First I wish I could take full credit for the briquette idea but if you were to 
enter the word fuel briquette on a google search or a you tube survey, you 
would need a very tall cuppa java to get through it all these days. The 
briquette producer conference we just hosted in east Africa well proves the 
point that the adaptations of the process and blends and stoves being tested 
are well beyond anything we cooked up through Ben Bryant's initial ideas... 
As to cleaner burn the question is two pronged the front end particulate and 
aromatics issue / "smoke" and the end burn with the risk of CO which is not so 
obvious...Many in the conference and globally now favor higher concentrations 
of charcoal dust. Some of these are charring ag residues beforehand because 
most see smoke as equivalent to all pollution... The CO awareness issue is 
still much in need of greater public awareness and it is at this end of the 
combustion cycle that where the char can be produced. I'll return to this issue 
subsequently... 






But I especially want to support your use of the term "densified non-wood" - 
which I think is also much needed in char-making stoves. Nat Mulcahy of World 
Stoves always emphasizes the use of "densified non-wood" as one of the main 
advantage of his Lucia stove (which could combust or gasify - but he chooses to 
operate in only a pyrolysis mode). See his website for his rationales - which 
are (in part) similar to yours. 
Several questions to you (as the person who probably knows the most on this 
densified non-wood cooking issue): 
1a. What are the relative advantages of making (not using) pellets vs 
briquettes? 
I am not claiming that pellets are 'less better'. In fact they may be far 
better given the high surface to volume ratio they present relative to the 
briquette. But what is better technically, is only part of the story. Issues 
like produce-ability and ease of use in the typical stove with its large grate 
for example...these are as or more important tht sheer technical advantages at 
eas tin the eyes of the consumers and producers we spoke with.. 






It would seem that it should be much easier to "press" (I like your closing 
below) pellets than briquettes (especially the "holey" type). Do you have any 
data on the relative power or energy and/ or cost requirements for production 
of pellets vs briquettes? 
There are about 25 generically different briquette presses out on the internet 
as we speak. I know of at least two more deisgns in the offing. I have seen 
several pellet type presses mostly of the modified meat mincer type. To make 
money in the typical rural market across Africa and much of Latin America, one 
producer with their hand press of whatever design, has to crank (or press or 
screw, or ratchet or lever for that matter) out about 16 to 20 kgs per day. I 
do not know what the hand operated pellet presses are capable of but I would be 
surprised if it is much different--again pe individual worker, using some form 
of hand press. 
In either case however, it is not the pressing which limits production of 
pettets or briquettes at the hand process level, at least where ag residues are 
concerned. It is the sorting and chopping fermenting mashing and blending of 
the residues which consumes the greater part of the energy required for 
briquette making at the hand /micro scale level. There is a very interesting 
technical innovation which will soon make it far more efficient. The guy doing 
the work on this is not ready to break the surface 'til he has something to 
brag about but a the rate he is moving it will probably be ready in a month or 
so...Its really his call to bring it out into the daylight when he's ready. 
We're just adding our two cents in here and there.. 







1b. For those wanting char and not ash, the charred pellet is already in a 
wonderful form for application to soils. Pellets mean some extra costs for the 
fuel supply in the front end of cooking - but could be a wonderful boon both in 
burning more cleanly and evenly and in later application of Biochar to the 
soil. The same is possibly/probably true for briquettes - which I presume break 
up easily after being pyrolyzed. Do you have any reason to think briquettes 
would be better than pellets in either pyrolysis or char-application terms? 
Intersting issue this 'clean burning' idea. Smoke was a big issue amongs the 
the participants in the workshop. What seemed to come out of it was the fact 
that one does not want to be attempting to try to ignite the whole mass to 
flash point in order to get a fire started..The idea is evolving that you only 
want to burn the immediate surface to start with.. Pellets can be ignited 
quickly becasue of their high surface area to volume ratio. Briquettes like 
most larger chunky fuels, have to be either top lit or side lit or as Robert 
Williams of the gorila conservati0on project in the DRC has demonstrated, 
diagonally lit. The idea is in all cases, to heat only the surface to ignite it 
, then progress to succesfully larger mass of fuel. Side fed stoves, off the 
Approvecho rocket stove idea, is now well actualised by Rok Oblak's side fed 
briquette stove design which is producing remarkable results (see 
rokstoves.org---I think its already long archived in the Stoves list) 


Forgive me if I am off here but from what I have seen in practice, the 
dampening of the stove if not carefully implemented, can generate a sudden 
burst of CO. Pellets would seem to be far harder to regulate in this regard 
because to be burned optimally, it would seem that --as with the ordinary 
mechanised pellet stove sold in the states and Europe at least-- only a few at 
a time are fed into the combustion chamber...Now how this could be made into a 
continuous feed process with continuous production of char as the product 
---while regulating air flow (as that seems to be essential to the process)--- 
could be a real challange.. 


Char making therefore seems--again, for at least the intended small cookstove 
user, to therefore be best handled in a batch process, with larger batches of 
fuel being pyrolised at any one time... 
In short, I think that for the intended user and stove the briquette would 
probably be easier to manage for pyrolsis in a batch process...Frankly though, 
I have not ever focused any real effort to make char (on purpose at least) so 
anybody's insights more than welcome. 








You concluded:] 

".... and would avoid both the wood supply and the char producing problems in 
one go ." 

[RWL: 2a. Re the first issue of supply (with which I agree), I have recently 
read an article (author's name forgotten - I will try to find it) that showed a 
breakdown of the well known global net primary productivity (NPP) number of 
about 60 Gt C/yr. They had about half going into wood and half into leaves - a 
ratio I had not previously seen. Since you are promoting the former (leaves) 
over the latter (wood) - and because almost all rural stove users are now using 
only wood (and even many briquettes and pellets seem to be made up of ground-up 
or chipped wood), have you seen this relative photosynthesis production ratio - 
which would seem to imply a huge wasted resource all over the world? I have not 
seen this figure before but would be curious as to how it as derived. In more 
immediately recogniseable terms however, the fuel value of the leaves off any 
one species compared to the fuel value off its wood would offer an interesting 
if not more direclty applicable comparison for any one project site. Ratios of 
net non wood biomass energy values of 10 to 50--- to net wood biomass energy 
values of 1, would not be unreasonable. 
On the one hand you have a far lower volume of a less dense energy supply per 
year throughout the tree's life (eg., leaves) being offset by the tree's 
greater wood energy supply albeit afforded only once during its lifetime... In 
our Theory and Applications manual we did lots of analysis in concert with a 
japanese agricultural research organisation working in Uganda with then, 
already several years experience, to derive fuel carrying capacities from non 
wood biomass residue per unit area. We did this over various land forms and 
land uses including of course normal offtake for soil tilth, as well as for 
feed and fodder here appropriate . And we have not begun to consider of course 
processing waste: paper, cardboard, sawdust, rice husks, charcoal dust and 
crumbs ( some 20% of the total of the charoal being produced winds up on the 
seller's floor as such waste).. Such processed biomass residues can easily 
constitute 50% or more of the whole briquette. Its a huge amount of waste in 
tems of available non wood biomass but outrageously huge whenyou combine that 
with the commercially processed residues. 








2b. But I don't understand your term "char producing problems". To me there are 
only benefits and advantages (at least with kitchen stoves). If you meant the 
horrible production of most charcoal out in the boondocks - with global warming 
and carcinogenic gases much worse than CO2 being produced - then I agree. To 
prove that it is better for society to promote household production of Biochar 
(char placed in the ground) will be the subject of my next message. Briefly it 
is that we need to make the economic argument that Biochar's two main 
advantages (carbon sequestration and soil improvements) outweigh the further 
combustion of the char for its energy value. Two main reasons that I think we 
can make this argument (which I do not contend has already been proven). First 
is the 2:1 advantage in the three-flows of money (which seem in the same 
ballpark). But more important is that the first two monetary flows (climate and 
soils) are both investments - with good payback over long time periods. The 
energy application of the char is only a single use - no out-year advantages at 
all. More coming on the many out-year advantages of Biochar. 

This is not to suggest that you do not believe in all this already - but others 
could interpret your sentence to favor burning of "densified non-woody biomass" 
rather than pyrolysis of the same. 

Ron, the argument is not whether or not it is justified on economic terms. I am 
sure the numbers prove its viability, especially with all teh intellectual 
horesopower working on the issue: 
But like much of development work, its not purely an intellectual issue: Its 
about the cultural ease and the real cost of embedding the concept ...Thats the 
reality you have to reach its the so called boondocks where the 90% of the rest 
of us live. 


The notion of promoting a longer term reward in a subsistence level economy at 
the cost of an immediate efficiency (viz., shortening the length of cooking by 
dampening it for production of biochar which may generate some income down the 
line, is a hard sell... 


It matters not whether I personally favor burning biomass over controlled 
pyrolsis but what the actual user actually favors. They do what you and I would 
do under their own circumstances--They use what they have for that day as 
optimally as they can use it. Unless they can be charring for making charcoal, 
I do not see them investing the char in the soil for returns over the next 
several years--- Not at least without some form of very intensive, sustained 
awareness promotion augmented by long term assistance to offset their immediate 
added fuel costs. 


Lest we scoff at that notion, one need only ask how many of us with our onw 
fuller stomachs, better education greate raccess to resources and far greater 
global awareness, are using biofuels or electric vehicles as we rant on about 
global warming..Look athe proposed subsidies tax rebates etc offered to 
incentivise the change look at teh politics and hte lobbying to maintain the 
status quo and look a the results. Its all abit relative, eh. When you can say 
that you are prepared to offset the user's losses and are prepared to really 
invest in the policy and public awareness promotion of Biochar then its time to 
talk about implementing it...And I say this as a technical convert to the 
idea... 


Cheers, 



Richard Stanley 
www.legacyfound.org 


ps., If anybody is interested we put up a summary of the conference in te news 
seciton of or website..Great stuff is happening in the briquetting world. 










Ron] 


pressing on, 


Richard Stanley 
www.legacyfound.org 





On Nov 29, 2010, at 4:12 PM, Crispin Pemberton-Pigott wrote: 
[RWL: I have snipped this to keep the responses separate - being different 
issues.] 





Dear Friends 

I agree with Ron that $10 is a believable figure for an improved stove with a 
dramatic (90%) reduction in emissions of PM. For the +$50 stove 

<snipped> 




_______________________________________________ 
Stoves mailing list 

to Send a Message to the list, use the email address 
Stoves mailing list 

to UNSUBSCRIBE or Change your List Settings use the web page 
http://lists.bioenergylists.org/mailman/listinfo/stoves_lists.bioenergylists.org
 

for more Biomass Cooking Stoves, News and Information see our web site: 
http://www.bioenergylists.org/ 
[email protected] 
http://lists.bioenergylists.org/mailman/listinfo/stoves_lists.bioenergylists.org
 



_______________________________________________ 
Stoves mailing list 

to Send a Message to the list, use the email address 
Stoves mailing list 

to UNSUBSCRIBE or Change your List Settings use the web page 
http://lists.bioenergylists.org/mailman/listinfo/stoves_lists.bioenergylists.org
 

for more Biomass Cooking Stoves, News and Information see our web site: 
http://www.bioenergylists.org/ 
[email protected] 
http://lists.bioenergylists.org/mailman/listinfo/stoves_lists.bioenergylists.org
 
_______________________________________________
Stoves mailing list

to Send a Message to the list, use the email address
Stoves mailing list

to UNSUBSCRIBE or Change your List Settings use the web page
http://lists.bioenergylists.org/mailman/listinfo/stoves_lists.bioenergylists.org

for more Biomass Cooking Stoves,  News and Information see our web site:
http://www.bioenergylists.org/
[email protected]
http://lists.bioenergylists.org/mailman/listinfo/stoves_lists.bioenergylists.org

Reply via email to