Dear Stovers,
I am trying to determine the best way to calculate the energy in the Natural Volatiles. The sample we place in the iron pipe of the oven dried biomass we can test or 'look up' the energy value. In the char remaining after 450c deg. (char-ash) we can give that a value of 34.78 kJ/g. Then for the total NV in the fuel we just subtract the total biomass from the char energy remaining. All done in the pipe. Then use the energy calculated from the increase temperature of the water to determine efficiency. I am still wondering what to do with the moisture in the fuel. Any suggestions? It is like the NV fraction but with possible varying results. As Alex reminded me in his writings there is the water-reaction that can increase the energy output or the LHV stealing energy from the NV. So depending on the stove and operator working the catalyst to control the internal body temperature the water can be a plus or minus. My thinking now is to just use the dry NV value as the total energy of the biomass. Like playing golf. You have a par 5 and you can go above or below depending on your day. The dry NV value is the value we use and we go above or below 100% efficiency depending on how good the stove and operator controls the catalyst and if water is included in with the biomass. >From the replies it's a bit hard to tell but it seems we are mostly all in agreement. : ) Regards Frank Frank Shields Control Laboratories; Inc. 42 Hangar Way Watsonville, CA 95076 (831) 724-5422 tel (831) 724-3188 fax [email protected] www.controllabs.com From: Stoves [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ronal W. Larson Sent: Monday, August 19, 2013 8:15 AM To: Discussion of biomass cooking stoves Subject: Re: [Stoves] Saving the WBT Crispin and list: Crispin and list: Sorry. Still not understanding. Who in the stove business has a problem with excess air that is too small? I read about EA ratios of 3, 4, 5.., not 0.3, 0.4, 0.5 ... Ron On Aug 19, 2013, at 9:06 AM, "Crispin Pemberton-Pigott" <[email protected]> wrote: Dear Ron >I am going to stay away from equivalency ratio until I see some way to use it. It is used to talk about the air supply when there is no excess air available. Once EA goes to 0%, how do you describe a further reduction in the air supply? So that is the use for it. Regards Crispin _______________________________________________ Stoves mailing list to Send a Message to the list, use the email address <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected] to UNSUBSCRIBE or Change your List Settings use the web page <http://lists.bioenergylists.org/mailman/listinfo/stoves_lists.bioenergylist s.org> http://lists.bioenergylists.org/mailman/listinfo/stoves_lists.bioenergylists .org for more Biomass Cooking Stoves, News and Information see our web site: <http://stoves.bioenergylists.org/> http://stoves.bioenergylists.org/
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