Dear Ron

There are a relatively few distinct "Stove Categories", in the sense of "stoves 
designed to accomplish stated tasks." For example:
1: Heating stoves
2: Cooking Stoves
3: Stoves designed for both Heating and Cooking.

Some stove systems produce char. Examples of such "char producing stove 
categories" could include:
4: Stove systems intended to produce char, with no inherent cooking or heating 
function
5: Stove systems intended for both char production and heating
6: Stove systems intended for both char production and cooking
7: Stove systems intended for char production, cooking, and heating.

Could you please elaborate on what you would consider "testing procedures that 
treat char making stoves fairly"?

What would you consider to be "testing procedures that treat char making stoves 
unfairly"?

Kevin



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [email protected] 
  To: Crispin Pemberton-Pigott ; Discussion of biomass 
  Cc: jetter jim ; Ranyee Chiang 
  Sent: Thursday, May 02, 2013 2:06 AM
  Subject: Re: [Stoves] Truth in stove reports Re: FW: REQUESTfor complete sets 
of raw data of cookstove tests.


  Crispin and list, Ranyee, Jim

     This should be viewed as part of my campaign to be sure that IWA and WBT 
testing treat char-making stoves fairly. Maybe there are ongoing discussions 
within GACC on that topic,  but if not maybe this will be of some help.  This 
is not complete.
  See below, skipping my short message from last nght, and starting with 
Crispin's reply to me, with new responses identified as [RWL3]


------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  From: [email protected]
  To: "Crispin Pemberton-Pigott" <[email protected]>, "Discussion of 
biomass" <[email protected]>
  Sent: Tuesday, April 30, 2013 10:58:06 PM
  Subject: Re: [Stoves] Truth in stove reports Re: FW: REQUEST for        
complete        sets of raw data        of cookstove tests.


  Crispin and list. 
    
      Thanks

   I see now I have not been paying enough attention to the IWA methodology.  
For others, you also may want to look at a report out of Berkeley, discussing 
the new IWA ranking/comparison rules, which include a WBT (probably 4.2.1??)  
found at:

      
http://www.docstoc.com/docs/154033344/Stove-Performance-Inventory-Report---Global-Alliance-for-Clean
      
   I want to make sure that the IWA rules (5 % is an important efficiency 
difference number!) are handlng char production in a manner fair to 
char-producing stoves.  I'm not yet sure of anything.  More tomorrow.

  Ron


------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  From: "Crispin Pemberton-Pigott" <[email protected]>
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: Tuesday, April 30, 2013 6:45:39 PM
  Subject: RE: [Stoves] Truth in stove reports Re: FW: REQUEST for        
complete        sets of raw data        of cookstove tests.


  Dear Ron



  I can add:



  >RWL1b:   Is the current WBT4.2.1 a "regular"?  "blunt"?   I would have 
guessed (not looked) that 5% difference resolution is being claimed.



  WBT 4.2.1 has a resolution that is dependent on several things. Because it 
uses the final mass of water in the pot for boiling and simmering, and these 
are quite variable from one test to the next, then you cannot expect the 
resolution even for very simple direct measurements to be very precise. If you 
look at three replications of a test and see what the variation is, you can get 
a feeling for the precision. None of that determines the accuracy which is 
another matter altogether. Yes it is a blunt instrument and cannot provide, for 
example, the heat transfer efficiency with a resolution of 5%. To determine the 
heat transfer efficiency with good precision you have to avoid crossing the 
boiling point. This is easily demonstrated by calculating the efficiency 
between 40-85 degrees (remember to account for evaporation) and then between 
55-100. The 40-85 degree range will consistently give the same result but the 
55-100 will differ from test to test, and will differ from the 40-85 degree 
figure even though the stove is operating in pretty much the same conditions 
all the time.



  Changing the pot also gives a different answer because the heat transfer 
efficiency is a matter of the relationship between the stove and the pot, not 
what is in it.




  [RWL3-1:   I hope we can hear from others on how repeatable the tests are.  I 
have not seen test results and would like to.  





        I wonder if anyone has proposed a test trying to maximize the amount of 
water boiled away for a batch (char-making presumably) stove?   I think this 
would be of interest to many stove purchasers and should be quite repeatable 
(not "crude").  The amount of energy required for vaporization seems to be 
relatively independent of pressure (altitude) and not very dependent on the 
boiling point temperature.  I hope others can check those statements.  I found 
(after quite a search) this at a New York School system website (and couldn't 
find a way to give you a cite):

     "  The heat of vaporization of water at 70°C is 2.33 x 103 joules per 
gram, whereas at 100°C it is 2.26 x 103 joules per gram.


  This says that Denver area at 3-4 degrees lower boiling point, assuming 
linearity, would have a heat of vaporization of 
  about 2.27x10^3 joules per gram - a difference of less than 1/2 %..    I had 
assumed until I went looking that there would be much greater variation.  Of 
course there will be variation with different pot shapes and materials, but 
that s true for any WBT.   If need be, it seems that even this 1/2% difference 
can be modified - as is the case for fuel moisture.

    So knowing weights lost should give an accurate measure of energy input - 
much closer than the differences you (Crispin) describe above.  Or what am I 
missing?

      Different energy inputs will certainly give different speeds of 
vaporization, but that could be part of the testing procedure.  It is not clear 
that the energy inputs per kg water evaporated will be wildly different.  Has 
anyone experience on this?  It doesn't matter too much if the procedures are 
the same for all stoves of a similar type.

     Wind should make a difference by removing water molecules above the 
surface, but these tests will mostly be in a lab.  Also a wind/breeze will also 
cool the pot and probably reduce the flame efficiency, so a fan is not 
necesarily going to show better energy transfer.  But will tests in the same 
lab space give repeatability?  Can stoves be equitably compared?  And can the 
placement of stoves into the IWA categories of 1-4 be done in a fair manner 
with this system?   I see no reason why not.

       For those who haven't read in this area, all stovers will be striving to 
achieve >45% efficiency (category 4).   Gas and liquid fossil fuel stoves are 
reported in these sort of tests (p 18, Figure 7 of above Berkeley report) to 
achieve 50%.  According to that same figure, char-making and fan stoves have a 
chance.   End RWL3-1




  [RWL 1 or 2?]


        I think that Jim is (using WBT4.2.1) testing for  and reporting on heat 
transfer efficiency.  Not true?

  Jim and I both report the heat transfer efficiency and the fuel efficiency.


      [RWL3-2:   Crispin may also be saying he trusts his, but not those from 
the current WBT4.2.1  (not saying anything about Jim Jetter's skills).  So I 
have to ask Crispin if that can be true?  Reporting yes for both, believability 
no for Jim, yes for you?  ]








  >>>[RWL2a   In next to last sentence, you say (emphasis added):
  <<    "There are particular metrics which provide valuable information about 
performance."
  >[RWL2b.   Are there some particular metrics that could be, should be, and 
are not now supplied through the WBT 4.2.1 procedures?



  There are 9 metrics in the IWA. Only one is provided by the WBT 4.1.2 which 
is referenced in the document (a proxy for heat transfer efficiency). In order 
to overcome that shortfall a small team is working on updating the calculated 
outputs from WBT tests. Version 4.2.1 has a new section added to each of the 
Test1-3 tabs which calculates some of the metrics needed for the IWA. There may 
be problems with some of those calculations. If so, they will come out in an 
independent review. If there is no review, we are at risk, as before, of 
adopting a method that has defects that matter.

       [RWL3-3:  The other "8" metrics are not clear to me.  Certainly there is 
a safety category, but here is a list of 13 "metrics" from the above Berkeley 
report:




  Output metrics

  Row 1             Fuel use(4)                   Emissions(7)                  
   Time (2)


  Row 2  Thermal efficiency; Species: CO2, CO, CH4, NMHC, PM, BC, OC; Time per 
test phase 


  Row 3:  Specific energy consumption;      Emissions per MJ delivered;     
Time per task 


  Row 4:  Specific energy consumption rate;       Emissions per kg and MJ fuel

  Row 5   Fuel use per capita;      Emissions per minute

  Row 6:               Emissions per task 


  Row 7               Modified combustion efficiency 


  Row 8               Combustion efficiency





      I note that there is nothing in this list about the efficiency of making 
char (which is why I am writing this, but that is a different story. As long as 
E!, E2, and E3 are reported, per Jim Jetter's note of a week ago.  But this 
list can be for various tasks and I am suggesting that one that is fair to 
char-making stoves is the one above - boil away until the maximum amount of 
char has been produced .  This is to ask if others think this might be a 
reasonable task to compare char-making stoves?   If not, why not?




     The metrics that would be added to the above list or do this as one of the 
tasks (none removed) could be:

       Measured:      weight of water(kg) evaporated, fuel, and char

                            times to complete and operator time




      Calculated:    E2 and E3 (percent energy in the boil-away and in the char)

                       ratios of water weight evaporated to input fuel and char 
weights  (and/or inverses - dimensionless figures of merit)




       Above for minimum time (max power) and maximum efficiency (minimum fuel 
use);  these might require three- four tests ranging from barely bubbling to 
rolling boil.   This may be excessive - maybe doing just twice near the 
extremes of the turn-down ratio is enough.  Mostly this test can be done 
unattended - for maybe an hour.   End RWL3-3]


     





   CPP:

  There are still remaining problems which is that three of the metrics in the 
IWA are not really valid. All relate to the low power phase. This has been 
brought to the attention of the relevant parties. The root problem is that the 
heat transfer efficiency during low power and the fuel consumed to run a 
‘simmering test now called a low power test’ is not related to the mass of 
water inside the pot. As has been point out many times here in the past, the 
WBT rewards, with a higher performance rating, the evaporation of water during 
simmering. Anytime the mass of water in the simmered pot is divided into 
something, an invalid number results.

        [RWL3-4:    I don't see that my above suggestion falls into this 
"invalid" category.  Everything is defined and repeatable in different 
countries, altitudes, etc.  The assumption is a normal full load of fuel and a 
normal (uncapped) pot of water - something many people do every day.  How 
little fuel and emissions and how much char for this task? ] 




  Simmering (which is not a scientifically defined term) was discussed at the 
IWA meeting and it was agreed to dispense with all references to simmering 
(which were duly removed). However the metrics requested still require 
simmering to be obtained which is a contradiction. You cannot, for the reason 
mentioned in the preceding paragraph, have a ‘specific’ performance number from 
a simmering phase (which is why it was dropped). The meaning is that you might 
divide the fuel, or emissions, by the mass of water in the pot at the time. 
Well, the mass of water in the pot is not related to either the fuel consumed 
nor the emissions from the fire so we still have a conceptual problem. If you 
double the amount of water in a pot, it does not use more fuel to simmer it. 
The YDD Lab has been conducting accurate experiments showing this.

       [RWL3-5:   I concur that simmering is difficult.   I am proposing 
something much easier to do (for char-making stoves only, probably, assuming 
they have primary air control).  More specifically, your sentence above which 
reads 


      "... mass of water in the pot is not related to either the fuel consumed 
nor the emissions"

  can be changed to read:

     " ... mass of water evaporated in the pot is directly related to both the 
fuel consumed and the emissions"]







  We are not discussing conceptual problems as a group and I have raised that 
omissions with the relevant parties. No doubt the WBT (which is one of several 
tests that can be done) will be further refined and we will eventually agree on 
what valid measurements are for it. There are still problems with definitions 
so I have recently made some suggestions in that regard. I posted some 
definitions of efficiencies here a few days ago. 


      [RW3-6:   It is too late for me and this already too long.  Maybe 
tomorrow.  But as long as char is included in the E2, E3 manner  (char weight 
and energy related to inputs), probably other definitions are OK as well.]




  In many cases there is no need to invent new terms or definitions. Engineers 
have been measuring and describing heat transfer for many years and there are 
many books on the subject but they are not the Book of the Month Club list. I 
try to make noise about the most important ones and in each case provide 
alternative calculations, definitions or alternative metrics which may be valid.



  As you know there are several versions of WBT spreadsheets still in use:

  UCB-WBT 3.0

  CCT 2.0

  UCB-WBT 3.1 (actually there are 3 or 3 versions of this one)

  PEMS Hood v 7.1.2 which appears to be based on UCB-WBT 3.1

  ETHOS WBT 4.1.2 (there are 2 or 3 versions of this one)

  GACC 4.2.1 (current version Feb 2013)

  PEMS Hood v 4.1.2 which appears to be based on UCB-WBT 3.1 but it has 
elements of the last version of 3.1 and also elements of the first (see 
calculation of the Dry Fuel Equivalent)

  There is another version of the PEMS Hood spreadsheet (or program) but I have 
not seen it yet. As far as I know it is the same spreadsheet as the 7.1.2 
version. It is being updated by Ryan.



  If you enter the same test data in each sheet, you will get a different 
answer from each for the thermal efficiency.




      [RWL3-7:   I concur this array of tests is horrible.  As near as I can 
tell, the only test being considered by the GACC is the WBT4.21 - and it is NOT 
(or has not been) designed at all with char production in mind.  I think the 
above is a fair way to compare char-making stoves.  Other stove types can or 
need not do the same.




      Anyone agree?     End.    Ron]




  Regards

  Crispin





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