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Drying,
burning and emission characteristics of beehive
charcoal
briquettes: An alternative household fuel of
Eastern
Himalayan Region
S. Mandal1*,
Arvind Kumar1, R.K. Singh1, S.V. Ngachan1
and K. Kundu2
1Division of
Agricultural Engineering, ICAR Research Complex for NEH Region, Umiam - 793
103, India
2Department of
Biofuel, MERADO, Central Mechanical Engineering Research Institute- CSIR,
Ludhiana-141 006 , India
*Corresponding
Author E-mail: smandal2604@gmail.com
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Publication
Data
Paper received:
26 September 2012
Revised received:
25 May 2013
Re-revised received:
25 July 2013
Accepted:
19 August 2013
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Abstract
Beehive
charcoal briquettes were produced from powdered charcoal in which soil was
added as binder. It was found to be an eco-friendly, clean and economic
alternative source of household fuel for the people of Eastern Himalayan
Region. Experiments were conducted to determine natural drying behaviour,
normalised burn rate, temperature profile and emission of CO, CO2,
UBHC (unburnt hydrocarbons) and NOx of beehive briquettes prepared
from 60:40; 50:50 and 40:60 ratios of charcoal and soil. It was observed that
under natural drying conditions (temperature, humidity) briquettes took 433
hr to reach equilibrium moisture content of 5.56?10.29 %.? Page's model was
found suitable to describe the drying characteristics of all three
combinations. Normalised burn rate varied between 0.377?0.706% of initial
mass min-1. Total burning time of briquette ranged between 133?143
min. The peak temperature attained by briquettes ranged from 437 ?C to 572
?C.? All the briquette combinations were found suitable for cooking and space
heating. Emission of CO, CO2, UBHC, NO and NO2 ranged
between 68.4?107.2, 922?1359, 20.9?50.8, 0.19?0.29 and 0.34?0.64 g kg-1,
respectively which were less than firewood. ?
Key
words
Beehive
briquette, Burn rate, Emission, Natural drying, Renewable fuel, Temperature
profile
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? 2014 Triveni Enterprises. All rights reserved. No part of the Journal can
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enforced or derived, rest completely with the author(s).
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