Dean: 

My preferred option is to kill the activity when the pyrolysis front reaches 
the bottom. The resulting char should mostly be heading for use in soil as 
biochar (after suitable preparation - maybe for water cleanup, etc). 

But you already know that some of us concerned about climate issues will be 
saying this. 

Ron 

----- Original Message -----
From: "Dean Still" <[email protected]> 
To: "Discussion of biomass cooking stoves" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Sunday, September 23, 2012 6:10:45 PM 
Subject: [Stoves] Purple flame 

Hi Stovers! 


I've been noticing a shift from blue flames above the burning bio-char in a 
TLUD to purple flames nearer the end of the burn when the bottom of the pile is 
glowing bright orange. I suppose that the blue flame is caused by burning CO 
but I wonder why the purple forms after the blue? The blue self sustaining 
flame doesn't heat the water in the pot as well as the purple flame phase 
although the pile of bio-char is fully ignited at that time and may account for 
the more rapid rise in water temperature. 


Any ideas? 


Best, 


Dean 
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