Biomass-fueled furnace
First Claim
1. A biomass-fueled furnace for burning dry, green, or wet biomass fuels, such as logs, wood and brush chips, sawdust, nut shells, peat, and biomass waste products of agriculture and industry, at high temperatures and high combustion efficiency, comprising:
- a gravity feed hopper into which the fuel is charged;
a grate system below said hopper upon and between which the fuel rests, said grate system comprising several hollow grate rungs and interconnecting channels through which combustion air travels, thereby preheating said air to aid drying and igniting of said fuel and cooling said grate system to retard the formation of ash slag and the deteriorating of said grate system;
a fully insulated ignition/pyrolysis zone into which the preheated air enters through holes in said grate system and passes in a generally horizontal path through said fuel resting on said grate rungs, thereby drying and igniting said fuel and liberating combustible gases;
a ceramically insulated secondary combustion chamber, laterally connected to the ignition/pyrolysis zone and capable of withstanding operating temperatures of at least 1500°
F., the secondary combustion chamber insulation enabling secondary combustion of the evolved gases at temperatures above 1200°
F., said secondary combustion chamber being partitioned by at least two substantially horizontally disposed baffles which effectively mix the preheated air with said combustible gases while allowing them to alternately travel horizontally and upwardly as they mix and burn; and
a secondary combustion chamber air inlet including damper means for controlled delivery of additional preheated combustion air directly into the secondary combustion chamber without passing through the fuel charge.
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Accused Products
Abstract
A combustion system for domestic or small industrial heating needs, utilizing biomass fuels such as wood and brush chips, sawdust, logs, nut hulls, peat, leaves and other organic waste products of forestry, agriculture and industry with essentially smokeless, clean exhaust. By preheating the combustion air, insulating the combustion process and carefully controlling the fuel to air proportions and mixing parameters, essentially complete combustion with very little excess air at high temperatures is achieved even with fuels containing over half their weight in water. This water is then condensed out of the exhaust gases in uniquely designed air and water counterflow heat exchangers that can capture over 90% of the high heat value of the fuel. This invention is capable of maintaining clean combustion at high temperatures with little excess air, at burn rates much lower than the best popular "air-tight" woodstoves and is capable of higher heat outputs than most domestic heat plants. This biomass-fueled furnace does not require electric fans or controls and can be used where electricity is unavailable.
40 Citations
4 Claims
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1. A biomass-fueled furnace for burning dry, green, or wet biomass fuels, such as logs, wood and brush chips, sawdust, nut shells, peat, and biomass waste products of agriculture and industry, at high temperatures and high combustion efficiency, comprising:
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a gravity feed hopper into which the fuel is charged; a grate system below said hopper upon and between which the fuel rests, said grate system comprising several hollow grate rungs and interconnecting channels through which combustion air travels, thereby preheating said air to aid drying and igniting of said fuel and cooling said grate system to retard the formation of ash slag and the deteriorating of said grate system; a fully insulated ignition/pyrolysis zone into which the preheated air enters through holes in said grate system and passes in a generally horizontal path through said fuel resting on said grate rungs, thereby drying and igniting said fuel and liberating combustible gases; a ceramically insulated secondary combustion chamber, laterally connected to the ignition/pyrolysis zone and capable of withstanding operating temperatures of at least 1500°
F., the secondary combustion chamber insulation enabling secondary combustion of the evolved gases at temperatures above 1200°
F., said secondary combustion chamber being partitioned by at least two substantially horizontally disposed baffles which effectively mix the preheated air with said combustible gases while allowing them to alternately travel horizontally and upwardly as they mix and burn; anda secondary combustion chamber air inlet including damper means for controlled delivery of additional preheated combustion air directly into the secondary combustion chamber without passing through the fuel charge. - View Dependent Claims (2, 3, 4)
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Specification