[Stoves] Mis-information

Gordon gordon.west at rtnewmexico.com
Sat Mar 31 21:42:18 CDT 2018


Just a couple of comments about possible dynamics that aren’t being considered, or that are difficult to observe and document. First, I acknowledge that the diagram posted from the World Stoves website was probably not a completely accurate representation of all the features of the device, so we can disregard any assumptions about it.

In discussing pyrolysis in a TLUD with my colleague Bill Knauss, he believes that the airflow may not be a linear updraft through the feedstock and that there may be internal circular flows and eddies. One cause for this is that the gasification of volatiles is dramatically expanding the gas volume well beyond the combustion air input, creating a much higher gas pressure, which could cause localized “downdraft” at the mpf. In any case, the expanded gas volume has to get out somehow, potentially even through holes assumed to be venturis. During experiments we did in capturing syngas from a large TLUD (made from a vertical 500 gallon propane tank), we calculated that there was a 4:1 expansion of syngas volume over the combustion air volume. That increase in volume and pressure has to go somewhere.

Another possible effect to be considered is that the “flame cap” at the top of the pyrolysis cylinder would consume all of the O2 from any air being drawn down from the top, which means it would not be supporting a downdraft pyrolysis reaction.  I am not visualizing where the O2 would come from, except from the bottom as an updraft.

I hope this is useful.

Gordon



> On Mar 31, 2018, at 7:17 PM, Ronal W. Larson <rongretlarson at comcast.net> wrote:
> 
> List and Crispin and Gordon:  cc Paul, Kirk and Andrew  (in this thread)
> 
> 	See inserts below.
> 
> 
>> On Mar 28, 2018, at 6:10 PM, Crispin Pemberton-Pigott <crispinpigott at outlook.com> wrote:
>> 
>> Dear Gordon
>>  
>> The World Stove works very well. When it was discussed here some years ago, I mentioned that it appeared to be a new type of stove. I agree that how it works is not obvious, however I can assure you it does and that many thousands of them have been sold. 
> 	RWL1:  Thanks to Crispin for his additional support that World Stove is alive and well.  
> 
> 	I agree with Crispin that it is by no means obvious with how the TLOD works.  But I suggest that there is now not much reason to doubt what Nat has claimed in his successful patent.  The patent is at: 
> 	https://patents.google.com/patent/US20110209698.   
>  Look especially at patent figure item #50 in part #19 for what I consider the main new (Venturi) feature that is not a part of any TLUD.
> 
>> There are elements of the design missing from that drawing.
> 	[RWL2:  Agreed.  The simple figure given by Gordon is only vaguely similar to the many figures in the patent.  I am intentionally not re-inserting the figure introduced by Gordon.
> 
>>  
>> A significant aspect of the design is that it can be refueled cleanly while running, separating it from most TLUD’s,
> 	[RWL3:  I agree on being able to add fuel with Nat’s TLODs. (Some Mulcahy videos show this.)  But so can any TLUD.  The doctoral thesis by Jessica Tryner covers this topic as expressed (with unhappiness) by Paul Anderson at:
> http://www.drtlud.com/epost/re-stoves-new-handbook-for-biomass-cookstove-research-design-and-development/
> which leads one to 
> http://cleancookstoves.org/resources/517.html
> where there are multiple cites to Dr.  Tryner’s work.  This (otherwise very nice) stove overview document has nothing on TLODs and World Stove.
> 	
> 
>> at least until there is a significant accumulation of ash at the bottom.
> 	[RWL4:   Disagree again.  Essentially no ash.   A main beauty of the TLOD is that it is virtually impossible to burn up the produced char (unlike all TLUDs).  This is mentioned briefly in the above patent.  Nat makes a major emphasis on using the produced char as biochar.
> 
> 
> 	[RWL5:  New topic:  How much new and additional effort by this list should go into comparing TLUDs and TLODs?
> 	a)  On the one hand, Nat has a patent - and this has presumably caused little work by others. I am not advocating anyone trying to duplicate Nat’s work and ignore the patent.
> 	b)  I admire Nat’s work, and know he has invested a lot of time and money in its development.  I don’t want to cause him any new patent defense difficulties.  Actually I am impressed by the work of hundreds in improving and modifying TLUDs.  Is this perhaps because there are no patent issues (that I am aware of).
> 	c) On the other hand,  his work is only poorly known and acknowledged.  It seems logical that because he has a 10 year head start on everyone else, any TLOD discussion should generally help World Stove.  And Nat has an existing manufacturing approach designed to minimize costs that will be hard to beat.  Besides the above two issues of adding fuel and avoiding char production, the stove is obviously very clean (but no detailed report I am aware of) and seems to have all the advantages of a TLUD (time saving, income generating, etc)
> 	d)   (Getting agreement today to bring up this topic from Kirk Harris), I hereby apologize to Nat if I am making the wrong choice in encouraging others to see if they can (while necessarily acknowledging the above patent) strive for modifications that might convince the patent office that another TLOD type patent is justifiable.  I am pretty sure that one can’t patent use of the (several hundred year-old) Venturi principle.  (Nor do I see that Nat has made that claim).
> 	e).  Maybe Nat can authorize (with royalties) other manufacture and use of what he is selling.
> 
> Ron
> 
> 
> 
>>  
>> Regards
>> Crispin
>>  
>>  
>>  
>> On 28 March 2018 at 15:51, Gordon West <gordon.west at rtnewmexico.com> wrote:
>> Is this the downdraft stove concept being discussed? (From the World Stove website)
>>  
>> <image001.jpg>
>> In this depiction, I do not understand how the feedstock that is below the “gas” holes would ever pyrolyze, whether updraft of downdraft, since no air would be passing through it.
>>  
>>  
>> Good find Gordon, I had heard Nat talking over the table about this but never seen a schematic, I'm tending toward being sceptical.
>> 
>> Andrew 
>> _______________________________________________
>> Stoves mailing list
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.bioenergylists.org/pipermail/stoves_lists.bioenergylists.org/attachments/20180331/d6618ac8/attachment.html>


More information about the Stoves mailing list