metalresearcher
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Does wood pyrolysis generate heat ??
I read on wiki that pyrolyzing wood releases energy. I always thought that that process is endothermic (i.e. costs energy) and this is one of the reasons,
only dry wood burns well, as only the burning of the pyrolyzed gases release energy, which is partially used by the pyrolyzing of the logs in the wood
fire.
If this is true, then burning wood (assumed dry wood and complete combustion of the gases, so no PAH release) is more efficient than I thought ?
[Edited on 2021-2-7 by metalresearcher]
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Fulmen
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The reason why wet wood burns (and heats) poorly is simple, all that water needs to be boiled away. If every pound of wood need to boil off a pound of
water there is less energy left to produce heat.
We're not banging rocks together here. We know how to put a man back together.
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Junk_Enginerd
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I don't think that part of the wiki article is correct. Doesn't make sense. As a chemical reaction I think it is endothermic. If viewed from a bigger
perspective and if the gasses that are evolved are actually burned, then it could be considered exothermic.
Burning wood is always a two step process. First is pyrolysis, where volatiles are being boiled out of the wood and combusted, generating lots of
flames. Once pyrolysis is complete, step two starts which is the combustion of rhe charcoal that's left. This step can get much hotter since it's not
being cooled down from boiling volatiles.
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Plinius
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The pyrolysis process is exothermic. The reaction starts at about 200 degrees C. The heat of reaction is sufficient to increase the temperature to
about 350 degrees. The heat of reaction is about 1600 J/gram which is 8-10% of the heat of combustion.
Source: Ullmanns Encyklopädie der technischen Chemie, 4th edition.
If the heat needed to heat up the wood to 200 degrees is included the reaction is probably endothermic.
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