Paul, Matt, list: 

I like your (earlier) idea of a ceramic "strainer". You might want to start by 
doing more googling on the topic of "ceramic foam" - which seems to be a 
relatively new sub-discipline of the ceramic industry. The "foam" companies 
seem to be able to produce a material which can serve as a strainer (open cell 
structure, not closed) - which will allow the hot gases to flow through the 
foam. 

Here is one example of a group explaining this sort of work: 
http://www.madehow.com/Volume-5/Ceramic-Filter.html#b 

There are plenty of companies doing this "foam" work - to be found via 
googling. 

Following Matt's suggestions below, there may be a place also for "rock wool" - 
vs glass fiber (to get higher temp capability. 

If you use metal (as below), I think a thin ceramic coating might help on 
longevity, if the coating is thin enough. Will be hard to match coefficients of 
thermal expansion, but may be possible . 

Ron 

----- Original Message -----
From: "Paul Olivier" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Cc: "Discussion of biomass cooking stoves" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Thursday, March 8, 2012 4:54:46 PM 
Subject: Re: [Stoves] the 150 gasifier in operation in Vietnam (Matt Redmond) 

Matt, 

One way to solve the problem of what material to use in a wire mesh dome 
is to view the wire mesh as a disposable item that might last but a few months. 
I found an easy way to insert a 304 stainless steel wire mesh disk (30 mesh) 
into a rigid receiving structure that is dome-shaped. 
When a flat wire mesh disk is pushed into the shape of a dome, it exerts a lot 
of pressure against the receiving structure. 
Nothing has to be welded. 
When it wears out, it is pulled out, and another disk is put in its place. 

Thanks. 
Paul 


On Wed, Mar 7, 2012 at 7:44 PM, Matthew Redmond < [email protected] > wrote: 


Ron, List, 


Interesting find. You reported that the silicon carbide meshes for drywall 
sanding are really just paper meshes coated with silicon carbide. 


I was trying to think of other materials that can handle high temperatures and 
ceramics came to mind. Ceramics are often used in metal casting processes. 
Aluminum Oxide, or even some sorts of fiberglass have high working 
temperatures. Ceramics generally have higher emissivity than metals (~ 0.7 I 
think). 


It looks like fiberglass meshes are often used to filter molten aluminum and 
iron for casting operations. Perhaps something like this would have longer 
lifetimes? Again, cost may become a big issue, but here are 2 that I found: 
http://www.ecplaza.net/trade-leads-seller/fiberglass-mesh-for-aluminium-filtration--6816138.html
 
http://www.king-in-china.com/productview.asp?id=954 


Just throwing a few more ideas out there. 


-Matt Redmond 










-- 
Paul A. Olivier PhD 
27C Pham Hong Thai Street 
Dalat 
Vietnam 

Louisiana telephone: 1-337-447-4124 (rings Vietnam) 
Mobile: 090-694-1573 (in Vietnam) 
Skype address: Xpolivier 
http://www.esrla.com/ 

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