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Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929

Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

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Page 1: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Bioenergy in Agriculture1929

Page 2: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

not just hot air

Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Page 3: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Brian Burt and

Ruth Hayward

• Growers and Retailers of Annuals , Perennials and Shrubs • 50,000 sq. ft. of greenhouses • 40,000 sq. ft. of outdoor coverable heated beds• 6 retail garden centers from Belleville to Kingston

• Right handed hired man: Alex English• Programmer : Colin Beckingham

Page 4: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

ing

Page 5: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Capabilities

We are also• Early adopters of technology from computer

systems to biological controls • Developers of new technologies (hardware

and software)• The builders or improvers of many of the

components which now make up our heating system

• not graphic artists

Page 6: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Were Curious about Biochar, Pyrolysis and Soil Fertility

We aim to:

• Produce char to support research in agriculture and environment

• Prove viability of co-generation of biochar and heat

• Develop a new marketable product

Page 7: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Lessons from the World of Top Lit Up Draft Stoves (T-LUD)or Low Tech Char Making Stoves

After Years of Working with Stovesand Combustion Analyzers

Page 8: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Air starved pyrolysis can be easy

Page 9: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008
Page 10: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

1. Minimize under fuel air for Gas Qualityand an option for Char

2. Foster a flame ceiling for Low Emissions

Page 11: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

What changes going from

Stoves to Boilers Batch to Continuous Vertical to Horizontal

Page 12: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Now Scale it Up with a Blue Flame Stoker : The chain grate is a 150 year old concept .

Start animation Start empty stoker film

Page 13: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Char Production

• Added air lock and better valves to our existing chain grate stoker to gain control of all combustion air

• Allows for air starved pyrolysis of fuel• Low velocity and particulate entrainment• Reduced Particulate Emissions ?

• Start combustion movie

Page 14: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Chain Grate Pyrolysis front , Gas fog , Flame curtain , Flaming

ceiling

Page 15: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Process Considerations

• Under fuel air or hot gas recirculation• Grate speed X 3-9, Transit Time• Char Temperature (800C +/- 100C)• Steady state operation and heat storage• Modulation and thermal “flywheels”• Control inputs?• Automated Oxygen trim for over fuel air control

and clean gas combustion (O2 8-12% in stack sample) (CO as low as 0%)

• Very low fuel moisture , auto pyrolysis?

Page 16: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Process Monitoring

Page 17: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Combustion Monitoring

Page 18: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Fuel or Feed stock

Page 19: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

ok

Page 20: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008
Page 21: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008
Page 22: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008
Page 23: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Biochar Feed Stock

• Moisture content <20%• Particle size , fines and pile dynamics?• Contaminants , heavy metals and hardware• Dirty demolition waste• Clean construction waste? Green Buildings and Green

(Black)Roof• Crop Residues, Straw and Stover (clinker solution?)• Switchgrass and Miscanthus (self quenching ?)• Pellets, Cubes, Chopped (<4cm)• Rotary dryer

Page 24: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Char handling

• Play movie 1• Particle size (ultra light fines)• Air lock (water or mechanical)• Cooling (water or time) < 100C at pipe end• Wetting, Ageing, Composting• Automation (barn conveyor, sludge pump,

magnets)

Page 25: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Char acteristics Lehmann J 2007 Bio-energy in the black. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment

Page 26: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Char Quality (PAHs)

Page 27: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Char Yield and Thermal Loss

• 0-23% Char • 0~45% Thermal loss• 2X fuel cost rule for minimum char

production cost• Chips at $50 tonne =char at ~$100 tonne• @20% yield char valued @ 5X the fuel cost

covers the total fuel cost.

Page 28: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

BioChar Saleswholesale or retail

• Bagged garden soils $2-$5 25 litre bag• Bulk $200-$600 tonne • Horticultural peat mixes ~ $400

Tonne• Calcined Clay?• Stalite (kiln expanded slate)?

Page 29: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

Collaborators

• Dr. Paul Voroney of Guelph University• Dr. Pascale Champagne of Queens University• Scott Environmental Group, Norterra

Organics Kingston, Ontario• Local enthusiastic farmers and gardeners,

both large and small

Page 30: Bioenergy in Agriculture 1929. not just hot air Co-production of Biochar and Heat 2008

The path to achieving sustainable agriculture involves moving from an

acceptance of the status quo to a redesign of the whole agricultural system.

Stuart Hill Ecological Agriculture Project

McGill University MacDonald College

Thank You