Smallwood News Forum Index
 SMALLWOODNEWS HOME |  FAQ |  Search  |  Log in 
Bio-Truck - Alabama Tour Locations

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Smallwood News Forum Index -> Energy
View previous topic :: View next topic  

Author

Message

Nora
Site Admin


Joined: 11 Jul 2006
Posts: 1938
Location: Missoula, Montana

PostPosted: Thu Sep 25, 2008 9:57 am    Post subject: AL: Biomass success - wood powered pickup truck

Reply with quote


Biomass success - wood powered pickup truck

Wayne Keith has converted his pickup to run on scraps of wood from his Alabama (US) sawmill. The heart of the wood-powered vehicle is a gasifier, which basically converts solid fuels into gaseous ones. Though the fuel in their tanks is liquid, gasoline and diesel engines actually run on vapour. Thus, the wood gas produced in a gasifier (also known as producer gas or syngas) will burn in a gasoline or diesel engine with only minor modifications to the motor itself.

When heated in the absence of oxygen, wood gives off a mixture of gases made up of about 20% hydrogen, 20% carbon monoxide, and small amounts of methane, with nitrogen accounting for the rest. The gasifier keeps the gas from combining with oxygen until it reaches the engine, where it combusts, giving off carbon dioxide and water vapour as waste products.

This technology is not new. Wood gas has been produced for heating since at least the late 1700s, and has been used to run engines since the 1880s. During WWIIs petroleum shortages, wood gasification for transportation fuel became rapidly and briefly widespread, both in the Europe and the US.

Keiths converted pickup starts on gasoline. As a supercharger pulls air through the gasifier, he tosses a piece of burning newspaper into the bottom of the unit. The burning paper ignites the charcoal, and 45 seconds later, the engine is running on wood gas alone (though it takes longer to get to full power).

With two separate accelerators, Keith says, the pickup can switch from gasoline to wood fuel in the blink of an eye. The gasifier looks like a large drum standing upright in the bed of the pickup. Keith has added five layers of insulating material around the outside of the unit, so that even with temperatures reaching 2,500F inside, he can stack bales of hay next to it without risking a fire.

Thus equipped, the pickup easily reaches cruising speeds of 100 km/h. A similarly modified truck pulls a trailer loaded with 17 round hay bales, weighing 500 kg apiece. Ive driven 30,000 miles (over 48,000 km) in the last three years, Keith says. Ive done 90% of that on wood. At 2 miles per lb (7 km per kg) burned, it takes 20 lb of wood to replace a gallon of gasoline. That works out to around 4,000 miles per cord of wood, says Keith, whose entire fuel supply comes from his sawmills leftovers.

Ive never cut a tree to run my truck or heat my house, he says. Keith says he has no plans to develop his homemade gasifier unit for commercial production, since operating it requires more skill than a standard gasoline or diesel engine. is whole system is kind of complicated to build and drive, he explains. The knowledge is a lot more important than the apparatus itself. Its kind of like if somebody gave you an operating table and a knife and asked you to do heart surgery.

A better use for the technology, he says, would be stationary wood gasifiers for generating electricity. Located throughout a county and staffed with trained operators, he says, such small units could be tied into the electrical grid to provide power from scrap wood, spoiled hay, and other unused biomass.

This story was found on:http://www.internationalforestindustries.com/2008/03/08/biomass-success-wood-powered-pickup-truck/
_________________
List of Smallwood News Forum Topics
http://smallwoodnews.com/phpBB2/index.php

Smallwoodnews home page with project slide shows
http://smallwoodnews.com/index.php

Back to top

View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website

H Williams



Joined: 27 Apr 2007
Posts: 2444

PostPosted: Wed Sep 24, 2008 11:01 am    Post subject: Bio-Truck - Alabama Tour Locations

Reply with quote


Bio-Truck - Alabama Tour Locations



Wayne Keith, a partner in Renewable Energy Systems LLC (RES), has developed gasification technology that enables regular vehicles which are normally fueled with gasoline, to be powered with a wide range of solid biomass materials, like wood, switchgrass, crop residues and broiler litter. Auburn University is partnering with RES in a Coast-to-Coast and Back tour in such a vehicle. The biomass powered pickup (the Bio-Truck) will be used to attract media attention, and will be powered on a wide range of solid fuels during the course of the tour.


The tour will start in Charleston, SC, on the east coast and take a southern route to San Diego, then north to Los Angeles, and San Francisco, stopping at different renewable energy installations en route to get the media to highlight these projects, companies and technologies. The Bio-Truck will then participate in a road race for vehicles powered by non-commercially available fuels from Berkeley, CA to Las Vegas, NV, in a 3-day event (October 11-13; Following completion of this race, the Bio-Truck will race the clock back to the east coast. The entire project will run from Monday, September 29 to Friday, October 17. In addition, a similar promotional project will be conducted within the state of Alabama during the week of August 4-8.

Go to entire tour schedule:
http://www.ag.auburn.edu/agrn/bio-truck/coasttocoast.html

Thanks to Al Bradley and Forestry Focus for passing this along!

This article found on:
http://www.ag.auburn.edu/agrn/bio-truck/

Back to top

View user's profile Send private message

Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Smallwood News Forum Index -> Energy All times are GMT - 7 Hours
Page 1 of 1

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum


Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group

SoftGreen phpBB theme by DaTutorials.com
Copyright © DaTutorials 2005