Alex  (with an expanded list of ccs;  I include “stoves”, since that is the 
community who first heard of your great work;  Thanks to John for the alert):

   It was good to see the name Burt’s in the following.  Somewhere there should 
have also been the name “English”.  I took the three papers being discussed 
here (two in an Appendix) as being very good news for biochar.  Three parts of 
the three reports (for me) need an explanation that probably only you can 
supply:

   a.  The char labeled “old” was clearly not as acceptable.  The size 
distribution and the carbon content were different.  Do you have an 
explanation?  How could the carbon content be so low?

   b.  I had not realized you could produce char all the way from 500 C to >700 
C.  Is the former done at lower power levels (less primary air) or what?  Can 
you “dial in” a desired char temperature?  Over what range?

   c.  Is yours still the only known retrofit of a boiler going from combustion 
to pyrolysis?

Ron


On Dec 23, 2013, at 12:53 AM, Erich Knight <[email protected]> wrote:

> Thanks John,
> 
> This work with Burt's Greenhouse will go into my report to Richard Landis at 
> DuPont & folks at ORNL Bio- Sciences. This email/report, for two years now, 
> is a collection of studies covering the alphabet soup of toxins. 24Ds, PCBs, 
> DDT, Cd, heck all the heavy metals, Salts, Atrazine, cents on the dollar, 
> Biochars are a "Shotgun" approach, in the best sense of the word. 
> 
> Along with ;
> Use of phytoremediation and biochar to remediate heavy metal polluted soils: 
> a review
> http://www.solid-earth-discuss.net/5/2155/2013/sed-5-2155-2013.pdf
> 
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> Erich
> 
> Erich J. Knight
> Shenandoah Gardens
> 1047 Dave Berry Rd. McGaheysville, VA. 22840
>   540-289-9750    
> 
> Policy & Community Chairman
> 2013 North American Biochar Symposium
> Harvesting Hope: The Science & Synergies of Biochar
> October 13-16, 2013 at UMASS Amherst
> http://pvbiochar.org/2013-symposium/
> 
> 
> 
> On Sun, Dec 22, 2013 at 9:48 PM, John Bonitz <[email protected]> wrote:
> Friends, 
> 
> Here is a new research report on the biochar from Burt's Greenhouses in 
> Ontario, Canada.
> 
> http://burtsgh.com/wpr/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Report_on_the_Production_and_Characterization_Biochar_Produced_at_BurtsGreenhouses_Final_O1.pdf
> 
> I've not read it yet. But the relevance to our work here in the Southeast is 
> that there are a number of existing biomass boilers that could be modified 
> and operated to co-produce biochar, just like Alex English did at Burt's 
> Greenhouses.  
> 
> 
> John Bonitz
> Pittsboro, NC
> 919-360-2492 | LinkedIn
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> 
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