[Stoves] Insulation and stove life

Crispin Pemberton-Pigott crispinpigott at gmail.com
Fri Jun 14 08:51:31 CDT 2013


Dear Kevin

 

I would like to add that using a fan will in all likelihood create much more flyash than without one. The advantage of a chimney is that the tends to suck the ash up the chimney, whereas a fan tends to blow it up from below into whatever outlet it can find. The difference in the room will be large, obviously.

 

Secondly the size of the PM matters a lot. If the pyrolysis process releases very fine siliceous matter with a gentle push from a fan, that material can easily rise through the fuel bed.

 

So we should be investigating size, total mass, chemical composition and whether the stove draws it from the stove and room or pushes it up from below.

 

Maybe it is of no consequence at all, maybe it is a hazard.

 

Regards
Crispin

 

 

 

Dear Rebecca

 

Firstly, I am concerned about the "Cristobalite Link" below, in that it seems to overlap "silica", "cristobalite", and other forms of quartz. See: http://www.quartzpage.de/gen_mod.html showing how various forms of quartz exist at various temperatures.

Note that "cristobalite" is one specific crystalline phase of quartz.

 

Secondly, what is important is the "respirable" dust that is actually respired. 

 

It is well known that respiring "silica dust" can cause "Silicosis". It is well known that "Small Particulate Matter emissions" from virtually any poor stove can cause serious health problems. Hence, the effort to design "stove systems" that minimize "Small Particulate Matter Emissions" into the living space, where they can potentially be respired.

 

Rice Hull Ash, even at 90% silica in the ash pit, is not a problem, in that it is in the ash pit, where it is not respired. On the other hand, an "apparently superior fuel" that only had say 25% silica content in the ash pit would be vastly more hazardous, if it vented 10 or 100 times as much ash into the living space, in respirable form.

 

This is where competent and meaningful stove design and testing comes into play. 

 

As has been said many times, "It is not so much the fuel, but the stove system design, that is good or bad."

 

Best wishes,

 

Kevin

 

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