I note that there was some conversation of transitioning from combustion to pyrolysis to provide the thermal
energy to heat a masonry mass. I was asked to post this comment:
Paul,
I find the
rocket stove mass heater of interest. However, it appears to be a combustion device
that depends on a narrow range of fuels -- mainly
wood. As such, it accelerates the natural
carbon cycle. That is, the carbon in the wood, if left alone in nature, would take decades of
decay before it fully returned to the atmosphere.
Combustion rockets it right back into the atmosphere in very short order.
What I would like to see is a pyrolysis unit heating the masonry mass and
the resulting
biochar added to the
compost on its way to the garden. This
will retard the carbon cycle by keeping the carbon out of the atmosphere for
a much longer time than the natural carbon cycle. And MUCH longer than
energy systems based on combustion.
Additionally, the pyrolysis system could use many feedstocks and might even
dispense with wood as a heat source altogether.
What progress on this transition as been made?
Full disclosure: I am working with Jerry Whitfield, the inventor of the first practical wood pellet stove in 1984, on a very scalable continuous
feed biochar reactor. We expect to show a parlor stove rated at 25K btus per hour in late 2012. We will also have larger units for industrial applications. We hope to see the parlor stove used in energy+ homes, homes that create more energy than they use, in such a way as to integrate heating with
gardening with cooking & eating. Our hope is to arrange configurations of these homes that will creatively implement ideas from
permaculture, co-housing, transition towns, carbon negative energy, etc. For the record, in Massachusetts, 11 energy+ house are currently under construction and 100 more are in the pipe line.
All comments, suggestions, and inquiries are welcome.
Cheers,
Jock