Dear all,

I once tried to burn a mixture of dry pine needles (which are quite reactive) 
and char particles in TLUD from wood chips (produced in TLUD). Dry pine needles 
alone burn nicely and cleanly giving high power but in a relative short time 
due to low density of the needles and the bed. My idea was to  lengthen the 
burning time of the batch, lower the power level and also try to burn some of 
the added char for cooking.

This test resulted in problems in the propagation of the ignition front 
downwards and great release of emissions (smog of volatiles not burned 
completely). The proportion of the char should have been lower, but I did not 
try again.

I have studied factors affecting the velocity of the ignition front in beds of 
wood particles. As Crispin, referring to Tom Reed, says air rate greatly 
affects the amount of char left. Fuel moisture also affects the amount of char, 
because it decreases the velocity of the ignition front. Longer time and more 
energy from the burning particles are required to heat up and dry moist 
particles to sustain ignition. Then more char is consumed. Thus both air 
velocity and the velocity of the ignition front affect the stoichiometry 
(oxygen-volatiles) in the ignition flame front and the amount of char left. One 
would expect that adding inert particles may have a similar effect as moisture:

-          the inert particles must also be heated but they are not 
contributing to the heat generation

-          in addition the inert particles form a partial radiation shield 
between ignited and non-ignited fuel reducing heat transfer
Both of these decrease the velocity of the ignition front. Then air velocity 
should be decreased to maintain the same volatiles - oxygen ratio in the 
ignition front but this may lead to extinction.

Heat is required to heat the mixture of fuel and inert particles and this heat 
comes from the ignited particles, which means that more char must be consumed 
due to inert material (compared to fuel only). There is also an energy penalty 
in using a mixture of fuel and inert particles. Inert particles are heated to 
high temperature and this heat is lost (and no char is produced). Of course, 
one could utilize the sensible heat in the hot solid product in some preheating 
or drying process, but it Is not very practical in small scale cooking.

So my prediction is that mixing fuel and char or some more inert material fuel 
will decrease the total yield of char. One must also find the proper range of 
applicable mixture ratio  for good operation (low emission). The effect of 
changing fuel to mixture (fuel+inert or char) on air rate is also affecting.

Regards

Jaakko

From: Stoves [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Crispin Pemberton-Pigott
Sent: 6. toukokuuta 2013 19:21
To: 'Discussion of biomass cooking stoves'
Subject: Re: [Stoves] [biochar] Charcoal as space filler in TLUD reactors

Dear Friends

Please consider a lesson learned long ago from Tom Reed which is that if you 
regulate the superficial air velocity in a stove you can burn the carbon 
completely, partly or not at all.

There may be many people who wish to burn the char chips they have lying 
(literally) around the kitchen by placing them into the fuel in a TLUD or other 
burner. A TLUD stove that accepts chopped wood (pieces, not chips) can function 
much better with the charcoal chips dropped into the spaces between the pieces 
of wood. It is worth a try. We cannot rule out whole classes of combustor 
because of someone's personal opinion of what other people ought to do.

Regards
Crispin



Dear Paul

Thanks very much for your detailed explanation.

Fundamentally, a "Perfect" TLUD will work perfectly if it has perfect fuel, 
perfect, required air volume, and perfect fan pressure (or stack vacuum) to 
deliver the perfect air flow.

Given that you have "off-standard" fuel, with greater average void space 
diameter, the pressure loss across the fuel bed will be lower. The fan or stack 
will thus deliver more air through the bed. Thus, you will get excess primary 
air flow, and if your secondary air porting was designed for a bed with a 
greater pressure drop, you will get less secondary air delivery; this will mess 
up your intended Secondary/Primary air ratio.

You can burn virtually any fuel in a TLUd, as long as it is uniform, and the 
stove was designed to handle it. Change the fuel significantly, and you need to 
change the design, to maintain the desired SA/PA ratio. If you "change the 
fuel", but don't change the design, then the only way to restore the system to 
"good operation" is to "modify the fuel" to one having similar a pressure drop 
across the bed, similar to one for which the system was designed. This is what 
you are effectively trying to do.

Assume, for example, that you have 4" long pieces of straw as fuel. This will 
likely give you all the problems you note. Adding char can, in theory, help 
increase the bed pressure drop. However, I am guessing that it will be a real 
stinker to get the char particles distributed through the bed. There will 
likely be "too much" in one area, and "too little" in another. Channelling is 
thus very likely. What you will probably end up with is a fuel bed having 
non-uniform flow properties, because of the large differences between straw 
properties and char properties. Try mixing various percentages of char with the 
straw, in a mixing bucket, then try to take "mixed fuel" from the "mixing 
bucket" and place it in the stove. I am guessing that you should see the 
non-uniformity of the fuel bed even before you ignite it.

My guess is that your best bet would be to chop the straw, so that it is 
free-flowing. This alone will make life very much easier for the operator, and 
will enable a greater weight of fuel to be added to the stove. Longer burn 
times between re-fuelling. Play with the air flow, simply by obstructing the 
fan intake with a piece of paper or cardboard. Then see if you can get your 
usual good combustion. If not, then consider re-drilling or partially plugging, 
the SA air holes to get back to the correct PA/SA ratio for good combustion.

Is chopping the straw (or whatever the fuel is) an option you can consider?

Best wishes,

Kevin

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