[Gasification] Re: [Stoves] Glass Stoves
Thomas Reed
tombreed at comcast.net
Sun May 21 07:57:49 CDT 2006
Dear Crispin and all:
Quartz (and Vycor) has a thermal expansion coeficient of < 1*10^-6 and
you can pour cold water on a white hot piece. Widely available in many
sizes.
I have been using a 5 cm diameter "glass gasifier" made with Pyrex to
observe gasification of biomass and test new fuels. Very instructive.
A few tubes have cracked from shock, but I usually get 2-3 runs out of
them.
TOM REED BEF
Crispin Pemberton-Pigott wrote:
>Dear Friends
>
>I was speaking to a glass technician about the possibility of making stove components out of low expansion glass. He thinks that the expansion is too high but offered the following benchmarks:
>
>Ordinary glass can take a temperature difference of about 100 degrees C from one side to the other. If you heat a piece of such glass to 100 and pour cold water on it, it will probably not break.
>
>Pyrex (boron silicate) glass can take about 300 degrees of thermal shock. The top of some stoves is a flat sheet of glass and the electric elements underneath get red hot. The temperature difference between the two sides must surely be greater than 300 degrees, yes? They do not break if you drop water onto the hot area. So I am wondering if there is another type of glass that is 'beyond Pyrex' and which can take high enough shocks to be used as a wood stove component, for example the grate.
>
>Something that would be useful is if any of you can corroborate the thermal expansion figures this guy mentioned: 90 x 10^-6 for regular glass and 30 x 10^-6 for pyrex-type glass without soda-ash in it. My gut feeling is that these numbers are impossibly high given that clay is typically 7. Perhaps they are 9.0 and 3.0.
>
>Anyone have comments on this?
>
>Thanks
>Crispin
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