Steam generator or turbine to produce electric power.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

>I've got a couple years experience with burning glycerin. I had to do it, 
>I've got such a large accumulation of the stuff. I've tried it in a couple of 
>wood boilers and in a babington burner. The stuff does burn, but it takes 
>special conditions to keep it going. Basically, without being exact about the 
>fine details, it takes about 1000 degrees of temperature to keep the stuff 
>going. Below that temperature and you'll mostly just burn off the methanol 
>component, leaving a heavy vegetable based "tar" residue.   It tried it in a 
>babington, but it does not burn above about a 25% mix with oil. In a wood 
>boiler it burns on top of coals well, but when the wood fire dies out it just 
>accumulates the glycerin without much reduction.
>
>My current burner has a babington burner running on vegetable oil into a 
>masonry stove with a separate drip of glycerin onto a hot steel plate. It 
>burns very cleanly and VERY hot. Absolutely no emissions visible. Now I have 
>to find out what to do with over 1000000 btu's per hour.
>
>Tom Leue
>
>In a message dated 1/11/03 3:59:45 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
>
>  
>
>>   I looked up a few of those commercial oil burners for use with WVO.
>>Sounds pretty interesting, though pricey... something to try and find
>>secondhand, maybe?
>>
>>Then I got an email from a farmer nearby, someone who grows oil crops,
>>asking about biodiesel production for on-farm use, and about ways to reduce
>>waste in the process, all the usual questions people have. We were talking
>>about 'glycerin' and ways to deal with it besides disposal...
>>
>>Does anyone on this list have experience burning their glycerin for shop
>>heat or process heat, using some kind of waste oil burner, either one of
>>these commercial units or one of the homebuilt ones off of 
>>Journeytoforever?
>>
>>I know that burning glycerine can produce some toxic gases if not done
>>properly. What is 'properly' in this case? some particular temperature,
>>some particular combustion environment?  how does one know, using a
>>Babington or a waste oil burner to burn glycerine byproduct, that it is
>>safe to do so?
>>
>>Also I do the 'ffa recovery' process sometimes- purifying 'glycerine' with
>>an acid to break down the soaps into salt and ffa, and producing a cleaner
>>glycerine for degreaser use. Like everyone I know whose tried this, I've
>>got a bit of ffa byproduct sitting around in my 'odd chemicals' collection
>>now (I believe Ken Provost experimented with using that same ffa in
>>soapmaking?).
>>
>>Todd Swearingen said something once about ffa being a potential fuel source
>>for a Babington Burner, and has said somewhere that he thinks it could be a
>>fuel in other situations. Anyone experimented with this, or any of you
>>engineers out there have any ideas on how well it'll combust and under what
>>conditions? (I don't have anything to try burning it in at the moment).
>>
>>Thanks,
>>Mark
>>
>>    
>>
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>-----------------------------
>Homestead Inc.
>www.yellowbiodiesel.com
>
>
>
>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>Biofuels at Journey to Forever
>http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html
>Biofuel at WebConX
>http://webconx.green-trust.org/2000/biofuel/biofuel.htm
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Biofuels at Journey to Forever
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html
Biofuel at WebConX
http://webconx.green-trust.org/2000/biofuel/biofuel.htm
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