Q

________________________________

From: [email protected] 
<[email protected]> 
To: Discussion of biomass cooking stoves <[email protected]> 
Sent: Sun Aug 05 14:27:55 2012
Subject: Re: [Stoves] material processing for briquettes few tips ontechnique 


Just a note to briquette length: i was talking about 2 very different 
briquettes, larger ones we worked on in Malawi in 2003 - 16cm in diameter - and 
the ones i did more experiments with recently - 10cm in outer diameter. Smaller 
were much better in burning, also more compact and easier to make. I did found 
out for the side feed stoves the hole needs to be bit bigger than what people 
usually make, around 4cm, these are also the ones i suggested the length 5-7cm 

Greets
Rok

On Saturday, August 4, 2012,  <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Fri, 3 Aug 2012 10:32:14 -0700, Richard Stanley wrote:
>
>>If processed correctly,  natural fibers will flex and then tend to interlock 
>>once blended with other materials in a water slurry.
>>One does not  achieve this by simple chopping or even direct use of the fiber 
>>without some form of softening (thru partial decompsition, in a hot humid 
>>anerobic environment,  (under such as a black plastic bag), or as we are 
>>learning from our Mayan colleagues in Guatemala,  use of agricultural lime 
>>(which is traditionally discarded after its use in hot water to soften and 
>>de-shell their corn kernals).
>
> As always I find your posts on briquetting educational.
>
> Alkalis, lime being calcium hydroxide, dissolve lignin and I expect
> this is what the bugs do in retting fibres out of the stem
> (simplistically wood rotting fungi can be classified into brown, white
> and soft rots, the white rots attack lignin and leave the cellulose,
> brown eat the cellulose and soft rots invade all the cells), it's
> lignin that hold all the stringy fibres together. So I can see how
> lime would separate out the fibres.
>
> Your observation that the bugs work better in anaerobic conditions
> may be that this is what favours a white rot. Flax sheaves where laid
> in a water filled ditch to ret.
>
> I may have missed something in Rok's post: Rok mentions 16cms diameter
> briquettes with a 5 cms hole, I take it it is the length he is varying
> between 3-12 cms and favouring a length of between 5 and 7cms?
>
> AJH
>
>
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-- 

Rok Oblak, MAA Design

[email protected]
www.holeyroket.com <http://www.holeyroket.com/> 

Gregorciceva ulica 5
4224 Gorenja vas
Slovenia


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