[Stoves] Fan-blaster Combustors, Stove Camp 2006, and the Dell-Point Pellet Stove
Paul S. Anderson
psanders at ilstu.edu
Fri Sep 29 21:11:06 CDT 2006
John,
Have you ever provided forced air for the primary air? That would let
you drive
the creation of the gases, almost independently of the natural draft
that would
be controlled for the secondary gases.
Please tell us the height of your pile of coal fuel, and how long it takes to
have the pyrolysis stage completed, and then what happens and how long for the
coke gasification?
Paul
--
Paul S. Anderson, Ph.D., Geography professor - Emeritus
Telephone: USA-309-452-7072 (residence and office)
Internet site: www.ilstu.edu/~psanders
For my gasifier stoves info, go to:
http://bioenergylists.org/contributors#Paul_Anderson
Quoting John Davies <jmdavies at telkomsa.net>:
> Greetings,
>
> Crispin describes the burner very well, but replacing the suction draft,
> which is created by a 2.7 m chimney, by a fan driven secondary air blast
> could totally destroy the flow characteristics through the burner and the
> fuel bed. Remembering that the design was for burning volatile coal, reduced
> draft through the fuel bed could be beneficial for biomass combustion.
>
> The system works on the following principles:
> 1. suction from the chimney sucks air through the fuel bed and through the
> secondary air heating system, via the "venturi burner"
>
> 2. The burner creates a velocity increase with reduced pressure in the cone
> section as well as a vortex flow. the air jetting into the vortex on a
> downward slope causes turbulent mixing and almost complete combustion of the
> gasses, with the very hot surface of the fuel bed and hot gasses, acting as
> a continual ignition source.
>
> 3 The gas /air mixture is controlled with a damper on the secondary air,
> which also acts as a turn down device by admitting additional secondary air
> which reduces the suction through the fuel bed, and the inverse. Control of
> the primary air is mainly achieved by the fuel size. and dense packing, with
> the particle size reducing as the bed becomes shallower. ( easily achieved
> with coal )
>
> To my thinking, blowing in secondary air with a fan would have the effect of
> raising the pressure in the combustion system where it is designed to be the
> lowest.
>
> Worth thinking about, or maybe putting to the test.
> John Davies.
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Crispin" <crispin at newdawnengineering.com>
> To: "Stoves" <stoves at listserv.repp.org>
> Sent: Monday, September 25, 2006 10:24 AM
> Subject: Re: [Stoves] Fan-blaster Combustors, Stove Camp 2006,and the
> Dell-Point Pellet Stove
>
>
>> I think John Davies uses the skin around the fuel bed to pick up heat and
>> then a perforated cone to blow that hot air downwards onto the top of the
>> fire. When the draft is correct, it is completely smokeless burning black
>> (i.e. not hot) coal from the top downwards. The centre of the cone is
>> open
>> for the upward exit of gases to the chimney.
>>
>> I believe it works because the draft is sufficient to burn well. A
>> downward-blowing fan would create the same condition without the need for
>> a
>> chimney. The amount of fuel in the chamber is not, I feel, relevant. It
>> could be a cup or a ton depending on how long the burn needed to be
>> between
>> fuelings.
>
>
>
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