[Stoves] Fw: Clogged chimney
Tom Miles
tmiles at trmiles.com
Fri Sep 2 12:01:46 CDT 2016
Further comment:
It’s fine to show the “ultimate” example but how frequent is chimney clogging in improved stoves? I would hope that clogging is easily recognized and correctable at this time. It is probably more due to stove use (fuel mc, etc.) than design.
Tom
From: Stoves [mailto:stoves-bounces at lists.bioenergylists.org] On Behalf Of Philip Lloyd
Sent: Friday, September 02, 2016 7:02 AM
To: 'Discussion of biomass cooking stoves' <stoves at lists.bioenergylists.org>
Subject: Re: [Stoves] Fw: Clogged chimney
No further comment? How about adding “polyaromatic” before “hydrocarbons”?
Philip
From: Stoves [mailto:stoves-bounces at lists.bioenergylists.org] On Behalf Of Crispin Pemberton-Pigott
Sent: Friday, September 2, 2016 4:34 AM
To: Stoves
Subject: [Stoves] Fw: Clogged chimney
Dear Photo Collectors
Attached is the ultimate example of a chimney clogged by long chain hydrocarbons.
No further comment needed.
Crispin
Dear Kirk, Paul and all,
Kirk: thanks for circulating your hypothesis. This seems well-founded.
Paul: measuring long-chain hydrocarbons / tars is part of the planned project of PhD student Thomas Kirch.
The intention is to measure the tars fairly soon. The catch is that our existing micro-GC isn't suitable for this, and finding someone who is willing to put our tars in their GC-MS is proving difficult. Until we get funds to buy our own, any suggestions for other ways of characterising the tars?
Cheers,
Paul
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