[Stoves] 2 KW Woodgas generator with turbine
Tom Miles
tmiles at trmiles.com
Sun Mar 18 11:22:04 CDT 2007
Even with all of the objections it is an interesting project. There have not
been that many wood gas turbine projects conducted in the last 20 years.
I note that the tag on the video is January 2004. Has anyone communicated
with Nye to see what has transpired since then?
Tom Miles
-----Original Message-----
From: stoves-bounces at listserv.repp.org
[mailto:stoves-bounces at listserv.repp.org] On Behalf Of andrew
Sent: Sunday, March 18, 2007 6:54 AM
To: Discussion of biomass cooking stoves
Subject: Re: [Stoves] 2 KW Woodgas generator with turbine
On Sunday 18 March 2007 10:24, Crispin Pemberton-Pigott wrote:
>
> This guy speaks as if it is normal to generate 2 KW worth of
> electricity from wood gas using his burner.
Firstly this topic is better at [gasification] rather than [stoves],
complication, safety and capital expense means the waste heat is
never likely to be a prime use of the technology, least of all for
cooking.
He may generate 2kW(e) but what is the cost in input kW(t)? My guess
is around the 5% mark, probably no better than a modern TEG. I say
this because we built a pyrolyser with a bit more sophistication
than this. it ran at 2bar above atmospheric. Now think about this
the next time you pump up a car tyre, it's a non insignificant
pressure. So the containment has to be internally insulated and
pressurised, the "skin" has to withstand this and to do so must leak
a bit of heat.
Why do I compare it with a pyrolyser? It's because there are
difficulties with complete gasification such that for this use it is
actually quite a bit easier just to deal with pyrolysis offgas and
discard the char. I think even fairly successful gasifiers running
reciprocating ic engines have tended to leave a lot of char with the
ash.
Terra Preta enthusiasts will see an opportunity similar to that
presented by a TLUD stove once carbon trading/offsets work at the
micro level.
There are a number of means of pushing up the conversion from these
low pressure "agricultural" gas turbines but they involve
significant cost. An increase from 11% to 20% was mooted for a 250kW
output with a pressure ratio of 2.9:1.
> There is quite a lot to see (including a 120,000 RPM turbine) at
Maybe but how safe is a turbine with an inlet temperature of ~1000C
running continuously, when it was designed to operate at an inlet
temperature of 500C for a vehicle life of a few thousand running
hours?
>
> My simplest interpretation of it is that he is using a vehicle
> turbocharger to compress the gasifier...yes?
Most likely the compressor provides compressed air for both the
combustion and the gasification, the containment all running under
pressure.
> Or is it burning the
> gas to drive the turbine and get electric power from the shaft?
He'll be burning the gas in a separate combustion region and then
expanding the products through the turbine, even with wood the thing
will need quite a lot of dilution air to get the turbine inlet
temperature low enough (you might be able to do this with the water
from green wood but it would likely interfere with the gasification
part too badly).
> Either way there is a lot of heat to cook with left over.
Definitelyy probably about 600C, but the food would fly and the cook
would go deaf.
Should anyone in UK want to further the concept I may know a man that
could find the bits still, unless they're already en route to a
smelter in China.
Andrew Heggi
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