Fuel Properties
Emissions from Residential Wood Combustion: Effect of Moisture on Emissions
Emissions from Residential Wood Combustion: Effect of Moisture on Emissions (1.3 MB pdf)
Fernando Preto, Canmet Energy Technology Center (Canada), Paris, October 21, 2005
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- 733 lecturas
Proximate and Ultimate Analysis
Proximate and Ultimate Analysis of Fuel
Biomass Energy Foundation
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- 890 lecturas
Understanding Wood Wastes as Fuel (VITA)
Understanding Wood Wastes as Fuel TECHNICAL PAPER #46
Jon Vogler, VITA, Volunteers in Technical Assistance, Arlington, Virginia 22209 USA 1986
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- 625 lecturas
Firewood Crops: Shrub and Tree Species for Energy Production
Firewood Crops: Shrub and Tree Species for Energy Production
US National research Council, Washington D.C. for US Agency for International Develoment, 1980 PB81-150716 (NTIS)
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- 794 lecturas
Physical Properties of Common Woods
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- 472 lecturas
Guatemalan Conifers
Guatemalan Conifers
Thomas T. Veblen, Facultad de Ingenieria Forestal, Universidad Austral de Chile, FAO, Unasylva
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- 687 lecturas
Characteristics and Availability of Commercially Important Woods in the US
Characteristics and Availability of Commercially Important Woods in the US
Regis B. Miller, US Forest Service,
From Forest Products Laboratory. 1999. Wood handbook—Wood as an engineering material.
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- 558 lecturas
Properties of Firewood, Victoria, Australia
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- 292 lecturas
5.1 The Use of Tree Legumes for Fuelwood Production (FAO)
5.1 The Use of Tree Legumes for Fuelwood Production (FAO)
PA Ryan, FAO
Fuelwood is the cheapest fuel available per unit of heat in most developing countries. The annual use of fuelwood has been estimated at 1,200 million cubic metres worldwide (Arnold and Jongma 1978). Fuelwood can be harvested on demand and is easily stored and dried. It can be produced from most tree species and from a wide range of silvicultural systems. However, if fuelwood production is a primary management aim of tree planting, a variety of factors needs to be considered to optimise both the quantity and value of fuelwood produced. For example, a species with high volume production is of little fuelwood value if the wood is very light or if the burning wood produces toxic smoke.
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- 415 lecturas
Basics on Combustion: Concepts and Calculations
Basics on Combustion: Concepts and Calculations
Kanchan Rai, Nepal July 2004
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- 2711 lecturas
