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Increasing fuel efficiency and reducing harmful emissions in traditional cooking stoves
[top] [end]IntroductionIn 1976 consultants from the Aprovecho Research Center helped to design the Lorena stove in Guatemala. The massive, earthen Lorena stove has been built in many countries since then. The design has some attractive features: the stove is made from rammed earth so material costs are low, its chimney removes smoke from the kitchen and it can be attractive. However, further studies at Aprovecho have shown how to improve the stove. More modern designs can achieve better fuel efficiency while producing fewer emissions and less smoke.Dr. Larry Winiarski, Technical Director at Aprovecho, has devised a set of design principles which can be adapted to many types of cooking stoves so that while the outside of a particular stove may look the same, the stove becomes more efficient. These principles are described below; the design principles can be applied to many stove designs including bread ovens, heating stoves,water heaters, incinerators, kilns and dryers. The latter part of this article describes a set of cooking stoves which are based on these principles, and are now proving very successful in Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala. Another version of the stove is described in this edition in the article by Rogério C. de Miranda and Frances G. Tilney entitled The modernization of small business through the Ecostove in Nicaragua. [top] [end]Design principles resulting in improved fuel efficiency
[top] [end]Earth is not insulationGood insulation is made up of little pockets of air separated from other tiny pockets of air by a lightweight relatively non-conductive material. Air is very, very light and cannot absorb and hold a lot of thermal units of heat. Heat passes much more slowly through separated pockets of air than through packed earth. Wood ash, pumice rock, perlite, vermiculite, dead air spaces, etc. are good insulators. Good insulation slows down the passage of heat.Earth is heavy and dense, and does not contain pockets of air, so it is not a good insulator – it does the opposite and absorbs heat, robbing the heat from the pot. Before experiments proved that we were wrong, Aprovecho stove designers thought that earth was good insulation. We did not understand the difference between a heavy dense material that absorbs heat, and insulation – which does not. In mud stoves, the flames, and all the heat they contain, are in direct contact with the heavy earthen walls, which rob heat from the pot. Also, the heavy walls around the fire itself cool the fire, causing smoke. Instead of placing sand and clay near the fire now, Aprovecho designers use natural insulation, like wood ash or pumice rock or homemade insulative fire bricks. [top] [end]Getting more heat into the potReplacing mass with insulation and forcing hot gases to rub against the pot dramatically improves fuel efficiency. Increasing combustion efficiency helps to reduce smoke. Making sure that hot gases scrape against as much of the pot(s) surface area as possible determines, to a large degree, the fuel efficiency of the stove. In many older stoves, the hot gases are not forced to rub against the pots. Instead, hot flue gases flow past the pots in big spaces and most of the heat escapes without cooking food.
[top] [end]The Winiarski 'Rocket' stove design[top] [end]Basic rocket stoveRocket stoves are based on a combination of simple principles:
[top] [end]Rocket stove with internal chimney and combustion chamber
[top] [end]Refractory MaterialsThe Rocket stove principles encourage high temperatures in the combustion chamber. Most materials are degraded by high temperatures, even stainless steel will be damaged over time. Ceramic parts can be made, however, that will last for years in Rocket elbows. Ken Goyer, an Aprovecho researcher, has developed a mixture that makes durable stove parts: it is kiln-fired, refractory, and highly insulative. This mixture comprises:
A women's co-operative in Honduras called Nueva Esperansa makes long lasting refractory ceramic stove parts from a mixture of clay, sand, horse manure and tree gum. [top] [end]Using the Rocket stove principles[top] [end]The new Lorena stoveFor three years now, Aprovecho has been working with local groups in Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala to develop and build various types of Plancha (griddle) stoves. Plancha stoves allow the user to fry tortillas, keep pots clean, and to cook using multiple pots. Flue gases are removed from the kitchen through a chimney. This work has been largely sponsored by Trees, Water and People. Organizations in Central America working on griddle stove projects include Ahdesa, Prolena Nicaragua, CLUSA, Fundacion Vida, HELPS International, the Peace Corps and the Godchild Project.
[top] [end]The Doña Justa stoveThe ‘Rocket stove’ version of the Plancha stove includes a Rocket type insulated firebox and chimney. Hot flue gases are forced to pass directly underneath the metal griddle (Figure 4). The diagram points out the design features of this type of improved Plancha stove named after Doña Justa. (She continues to improve, build, and test this stove in Honduras.)The pots can either sit on top of the griddle, be placed over holes cut in the griddle, or be partially submerged into the griddle. When more of the pot is directly exposed to heat, efficiencies rise. The griddle is supported on top of a box built from ordinary brick, lorena mix, sheet metal, or any inexpensive material like adobe, etc. An insulative material like wood ash isolates the heat from the high mass stove body. If the chimney is cement, it can be a part of the box, supported by four walls. The heavy chimney is placed behind a wall of brick that allows hot flue gases to flow freely into the bottom of the chimney. If the chimney is made from lightweight sheet metal it can rise directly out of a hole cut in the griddle.
[top] [end]Griddle stoves with submerged potsPartially submerging the pots under the griddle can double the efficiency of heat transfer. The efficiency of this type of stove is highest because the design allowsthe greatest amount of heat to strike the increased surface area of the pots. The most efficient griddle stove with multiple pots can achieve efficiencies of more than 40%. Sheet metal or insulative ceramic material form walls near the pots to create a 6mm gap so that the hot gases are forced to rub against the pots. Like the other stoves, both the combustion chamber and fire flow path are insulated.[top] [end]The HELPS stoveIn Guatemala, an inexpensive soft brick tile called a baldosa (Figures 5 and 6) is used to make the combustion chambers in the beautiful and inexpensive HELPS molded cement Plancha stove. These insulative ceramic combustion chambers make the stoves easier to start and faster to heat up compared with dense materials like cast iron or normal brick. Women in the village of Santa Avelina, Guatemala who tested both versions of the HELPS stoves, much preferred the lower mass ceramic parts, which boiled water more quickly (Figure 7).Summary There is always a need for variations in stove design. One village may insist that pots stay clean. A village fifty miles away may need greater fuel efficiency. Rocket stoves can change to meet local needs but the essential design principles remain the same. Working with local people, it is important to be flexible in designing stoves to meet local needs. Not changing the outward appearance of the traditional stove can be helpful in gaining acceptance of the new technology inside the stove. All of these Rocket stoves demonstrate various efficient ways to cook while creating a reduced or smoke free kitchen. The simple Rocket stove can be a useful option if, for economic or other reasons, a chimney is not going to be used. The added chimney removes all of the smoke and for that reason is always preferable. The Plancha stoves and the New Lorena stove also contain design features that are novel and important:
For further information, please contact: Dr. Larry Winiarski, Technical Director, Aprovecho Research Center, 80574 Hazelton Road, Cottage Grove, Oregon 97424, USA. Apro@... http://www.efn.org/~apro [top] [end]Download the original article Increasing fuel efficiency and reducing harmful emissions in traditional cooking stoves by Dean Still and Larry Winiarski (156 KB) [top] [end]Contents: Boiling Point 47: Household energy and enterprise
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19 February 2004; Last edited:
05 September 2007; Version: 2 | |||||||||||||
Pagename: IncreasingFuelEfficiencyAndReducingHarmfulEmissionsInTraditionalCookingStove @HEDON: KTAA | |||||||||||||





Increasing fuel efficiency and reducing harmful emissions in traditional cooking stoves by Dean Still and Larry Winiarski (156 KB)