[Stoves] stoves and credits again

Paul Anderson psanders at ilstu.edu
Sat Sep 30 00:36:45 CDT 2017


Crispin.   See below.

Doc  /  Dr TLUD  /  Prof. Paul S. Anderson, PhD
Email:  psanders at ilstu.edu
Skype:   paultlud    Phone: +1-309-452-7072
Website:  www.drtlud.com

On 9/29/2017 11:33 PM, Crispin Pemberton-Pigott wrote:
> Dear Paul
>
> Again I feel you are imposing restrictions on how products should 
> work. Recycled char can definitely be burned. If you have pellets that 
> yield 15-20"% of initial fuel mass then definitely some of the char 
> burned. That establishes the principle that TLUD‎s can burn char.
No.   The char yield is associated with some char combustion  during the 
time of the pyrolysis, but that is not the same as having the char as 
the input fuel.
>
> The stoves that recycle char to the next cooking session burn a large 
> amount of the total char such that the mass 'carried forward' is about 
> the same ea‎ch time. This establishes that the total char produced, 
> net, each replication is completely combusted.
That is "burning char" during the pyrolysis process, not the burning of 
char as the input fuel (100% of the input being charcoal).
>
> All that is needed is to increase the gasification rate until there is 
> significant char gasification. ‎This does not hold for all models nor 
> all fire powers. Some produce more than they can recycle so a portion 
> is lost, or retained for other purposes. In the fuel consumption 
> calculation that is fuel fed, meaning more is needed next time. For 
> example a stove may produce 20% char from a mix that was 90% fresh 
> pellets and 10% old char. In that case half the remaining char is not 
> used next time.
Tom Reed showed years ago that the amount of char produced is inversely 
impacted by the amount of primary air.   Expect that to be the case.
>
> Stoves that do this have been made and sold in Indonesia for several 
> years.
Please send details about those stoves, numbers, how they are used, 
photos, videos, etc..   I do  not dispute that statement.   But it would 
be nice to have some supportive info so we all can interpret what you 
says you have (measured or seen or been told or believe).
>
> While there is a 'purist' group holding that char is produced and not 
> burned,
I said above that some char is burned during the pyrolysis stage. TLUD 
processes have OXIC pyrolysis (oxygen present, but in limited amount), 
also called "flaming pyrolysis", but I prefer the term "glowing 
pyrolysis."  So some char will be consumed.   ANOXIC pyrolysis (no 
entrance of oxygen) is what occurs in a retort. Expect some char to be 
consumed during the pyrolysis
> and there are stoves like that, it is not a general case. It is 
> particular to those products with a low temperature gas production 
> rate. The cleanest stove we tested was like that. The most efficient 
> was like the case above, in the high 30's, assessed on the Central 
> Java cooking sequence.
Efficient.  As in heat transfer efficiency, I assume.   And what you 
describe is logical.  that is, turn  up the heat (more primary air) and 
the stronger fire moves the hot gases better and that improves the 
efficiency.
>
> The Rocketworks stove from South is in the same efficiency range. It 
> is a stick burner‎ with a novel grate and both preheated secondary and 
> tertiary air, i.e. not a gasifier nor semi-gasifier.
I am not familier yet with that stove.  Interesting.   Do  you have a 
definition  for "tertiary air?"   Please let us know.

Crispin, referring to your initial sentence, I do not IMPOSE 
restrictions on TLUD usage.   I point out (to the best of my ability) 
what I believe (know in some cases) to be true and the best practices.   
But just suggestions.   I have seen so many different methods and 
materials and designs about TLUD stoves for over 16 years.   SOMETIMES 
THERE ARE SOME REAL GOOD INNOVATIONS  (witness Kirk Harris and Alexis 
Belonio).   I try to call attention to the innovations that seem to have 
strong merit.

And sometimes the differences are (be nice, use soft words) less than 
stellar.  Some people totally disregard what is clearly established.   
Maybe they do not read the materials.   Or maybe the "not invented here" 
complex takes over.   Or they like reinventing the wheel.    They are 
welcome to do all of that and more.   (But not with my time nor with my 
funding.)

To me, the burning of charcoal as charcoal (not during the migratory 
pyrolytic front stage) inside a TLUD stove is to be avoided. Reasons 
include:
a.  overheats the metal, shortening the life of the fuel chamber,
b.  The air enters at the bottom, and the char is burning there, and it 
is underneath the layers of relatively cooler char (that looks black, 
not glowing), which blocks the radient heat from reaching the pot,, and
c.  the hot char at the bottom is relatively far away from the bottom of 
the pot (and everyone knows that proper charcoal stoves have the pot 
very close to the hot char.)

In baseball, "three stricks and you're out."  But this isn't baseball, 
and I am not the umpire.   But the ballgame is more fun if the players 
learn good techniques so that they have better chances to hit the ball 
(or cook the meal).   But I would rather  have many people playing ball 
with  suboptimal skills (or using TLUD stoves in less than optimal ways) 
than to not have the ballgame or TLUD cooking taking  place.

Paul

>
> Regards
> Crispin
>
>
>> Crispin,
>
> I am sure that Bill and Gordon in New Mexico (and others including 
> mysel\f) will appreciate more info (details, photos, sizes, etc) about 
> the continuous TLUDs with bottom feeding. Please try to provide.
>
> When mixing in the previously made char into the future batches of 
> fuel, there are two concerns:
>
> 1.  Cannot mix in hot, glowing char (which would ignite low into the 
> columnof fuel),  Therefore must be extinquished, which is an extra step.
>
> 2.  Char from a TLUD at whatever temperature of pyrolysis will 
> essentially be "inert" material into a next batch to be pyrolyzed at 
> the same temperature.   No gain.   Just filling space.    [[ But one 
> exception:  created char can pick up some of the volatiles that are 
> rising through it.   Those volatiles would be elegible to be released 
> for making energy in the second round.   As far as I know, those 
> volatiles would be a very very small percentage of the energy in the 
> processes. }}    So why bother to do it, UNLESS the intention is to 
> burn the created char (which should not be done in a TLUD).
>
> I agree that anyone is allowed to test and experiment with any methods 
> and materials.   What we are awaiting are reports of adoption of 
> methods etc by significant numbers of appropriate users.
>
> Paul
>
> Doc  /  Dr TLUD  /  Prof. Paul S. Anderson, PhD
> Email:psanders at ilstu.edu
> Skype:   paultlud    Phone: +1-309-452-7072
> Website:www.drtlud.com
> On 9/28/2017 10:29 AM, Crispin Pemberton-Pigott wrote:
>>
>> Dear Paul
>>
>> Thanks for the ideas about char. I want to correct a couple of 
>> impressions.
>>
>> *>*And users can continually drop in  more fuel, which is "trickle 
>> feeding"and requires user attention.   TLUDs are batch units.
>>
>> This is only true some of the time. TLUD burners are frequently 
>> (often, not rarely) built at small industrial scale using batch-push 
>> feeding from below. I was surprised to find that the Stove 
>> Development Centre in Ulaanbaatar has been making a number of these 
>> units – the surprise coming from the fact that none of the domestic 
>> candidate stoves had used this system. I saw one being repaired in 
>> August.  Being a TLUD does not mean it has to be a single batch unit.
>>
>> The char or charred fuel is not placed on top of the fresh fuel – it 
>> is mixed in and forms part of the fuel. I don’t know what the upper 
>> limits of content are, I believe for different stoves there are 
>> different limits. The HTP spreadsheet was modified in 2013 or so to 
>> accommodate this sort of ‘limited ability to recycle processed fuel’ 
>> and still produce the correct ‘as burned’ (AB) fuel analysis that 
>> forms the basis of the chemical mass balance calculation.
>>
>> Next, with reference to the recycling of fuel from one burn to the next:
>>
>> >Also, apart from the lab testing, is there evidence that the 
>> Indonesian cooks are actually using the stove as it was being used in 
>> the lab?
>>
>> That is not up to the lab performing the test. If a manufacturer 
>> comes out with a novel method of construction and operation, it is up 
>> to the lab to test it as designed, not to speculate about home 
>> someone in future might use it.
>>
>> For a /project/ it makes a difference and a project might not adopt a 
>> stove for promotion if the cultural conflicts with how it works. In 
>> short, the testing does not stand in the way of innovation. There is 
>> a clear separation between the invention and testing of products from 
>> the projects that may or may not use them. I realise that there has 
>> been a confabulation of projects and test protocols in the past. That 
>> should end. A test method should be technology neutral.
>>
>> That said, a test protocol specific to a project is also valid. On 
>> project I was associated with required that the stoves be 
>> mis-operated and the performance reported because ‘obvious misuse’ is 
>> an accepted risk and we wanted to know the implications.
>>
>>
>> >These stoves can be operated in  different ways.
>>
>> Yes, but it would be good if you did not limit the operation of a 
>> TLUD to a batch or trickle-feed mode. There are other products 
>> around. TLUD coal and pellet and briquette burners are quite common. 
>> I expect one day the TLUD promoters will accept this as a standard 
>> operating technique because it overcomes several of the attested 
>> shortcomings of batch-loaded stoves.
>>
>> >How many of each of those units (Todd's or the Indonesian ones) are 
>> in daily use in  households?   I hope that the numbers of users are 
>> VERY high.   Please send details.
>>
>> I am not sure stoves are listed by operating mode. Those that are 
>> claimed to be operating as TLUDs with recycled fuel could be 
>> identified by brand and the numbers (probably) extracted from the CSI 
>> Indonesia aggregated sales numbers. It is in the thousands I suppose. 
>> I am not the one to ask.
>>
>> Regards
>>
>> Crispin
>>
>>
>>
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