stumpjumper83
ArboristSite Operative
anyone here have any experience with this process of burning wood? My early experiments seem pretty interesting.
I am not sue about this, wood gasification? sounds interesting. Please explain a bit more!
Basically any wood combustion happens by gasification. Solid wood doesn't burn, only the vapors given off as the wood pyrolyzes (sp?) burn. A gasifier just moderates this process such that you control the oxidation of the wood to give off the vapors in a controlled fashion. The vapors are then either burnt at or near the point of the pyrolysis (generally called close-coupled gasification) or alternatively the gases are moved somewhere else for combustion. The gases can even be used to fuel an internal combustion engine. In fact, coupling a gasifier to an engine generally streamlines the design of the gasifier, as it uses the vacuum from the engine to pull air through the gasifier.
As stumpjumper said, do a google search on the subject. There's a ton of information and examples of gasifiers out there.
I dont have the webb site but in 1989 FEMA has a 70 or so page read out to make your own wood gas generator to run a gas motor, very easy.
I havent made one yet but soon i'll have one.
Jack
...The down side is...absolutely require seasoned wood...
I know you're talking about specific application of gasification in an OWB and I'm talking about gasification in general, so what I'm going to say may not fully apply. But, research has shown gasifiers in general work best with a good amount of moisture present during combustion. The theory is that extra moisture lends itself to more steam, which in turn helps to crack the complex, long chain hydrocarbons in the volatiles down to carbon monoxide and hydrogen. Ideal woodgas is almost 100% composed of those two compounds, though you'll never acheive that.
Of course soaking wet wood probably is not the best, but "green" wood is generally just fine for gasification. I know my little gasifiers worked best with freshly chipped green branches. When I used chips from dead branches the pyrolysis zone would get too big on me and I'd walk right on the fine line of a thermal runaway.
Probably proper design could optimize a gasifier for virtually any moisture content, though.
Well, CO, hydrogen and methane... I've heard before that some moisture is necessary, but I've also heard that the ideal moisture content is somewhere around 20% or below... which I believe is about where 2 year seasoned hardwood is. I don't know, I'm not an expert on that type of thing. My formal training was not actually even in controlled combustion, but I know enough about it to spout off
I'd still be skeptical of the benefits of the presence steam without a detailed explanation... all I can see it doing is adding thermal mass to the process and absorbing heat to change phase and then raise its temperature, which takes away from the available heat the more complex molecules need to break their bonds and reduce.
The big problem I see with gasifiers and moisture is, after a bit a gasifier is running at a relatively steady state. There's a minimum rate of heat generation needed to sustain the complete combustion process. The only thing the I see that presence of water vapor does is absorb heat and bring the process back towards that minimum. After all, half of your combustion products are already water vapor...
Duh, I forgot about methane. It's been a while since I read much formal research on gasification. I'll have to look back at some of my old notes and see if I can find the references that dealt with moisture content of the material.
I agree with what you're talking about with the water adding thermal mass, but the only real energy penalty you're paying is the energy it takes to turn liquid water into vapor which admittedly isn't insignificant. But if, that water vapor improves the efficiency of the hydrocarbon cracking-thus resulting in less tar by-product being removed by the filtration-then the penalty isn't nearly as bad.
I know we did some work when I was at Ok. State looking at gasification by-products but I think most of the starting materials had a pretty uniform moisture content. I don't know if the my former boss still has any of that data or not, but I bet she does somewhere. I'll have to give her a call sometime and see.
Just out of curiosity, what was/is your field of study/profession?
Amusing read this. One thing that gets overlooked on the subject of wood gassification; there are simpler systems out there that are far cheaper. In particular, the Russian or Scandinavian style fireplace. Those systems have no moving parts, nor any need for a water storage mass or pumps to move the heat around. They burn more completely, and have almost no emissions. They are also very efficient.
One simple system is to use two types of bricks, one inside that expands and contracts and has high heat resistance, and an outer layer that stores and radiates the heat out into the house. Small burn chamber to burn wood in and burn it all fast, hot and completely. If they are built right they have little or no creosote buildup, and very little heat escapes out the chimney. I was down at a friend's house near Crater Lake last week, and was given a tour of his fireplace. They use 1/3 of the wood that they did when they had a standard indoor wood stove for heat.
If I were building a house (and I may be soon) I wood use this type of system for heating the house with. I wood add an outside door to the burn chamber as well, so I could add wood from outside the house, and clean the ashes out from outside as well.