An Easier Institutional Stove?
Institutional-size stoves like this Lihubesi stove frequently use a sunken pot or pot skirt to increase heat transfer efficiency.
While testing the institutional-size Alpha Limited TLUD, ARC staff conducted an experiment to see if a skirt is strictly necessary with a very large pot. A 58cm in diameter pot was heated by the six-inch in diameter Tom Reed Alpha Limited forced draft pellet stove with an added 0.75 constant cross sectional area Winiarski stovetop.
A complete stovetop was also made that increased heat transfer efficiency to the entire bottom of the pot. As-hot-as-possible gases are directed to flow as closely as possible to the surface without reducing their velocity.
The bottom of the 60 liter, 58cm in diameter pot (used in institutional stoves in Africa) had an external surface area of 2,640 square cm. The slanted Winiarski stovetop created a 5mm gap at the outer edges of the pot (See above).
The seven inch deep, Alpha Limited FD-TLUD stove ran for 82 minutes using 2.03 kg Douglas fir pellets. 20 liters of water boiled in ~60 minutes when a lid was placed on top of the pot. (A higher firepower stove is needed to boil 60 liters in a reasonable period of time).
The single test results were:
efficiency_with_char_ 57%
firepower_with_char_high power 4.80 kW
CO_useful_energy_delivered_ 1 g/MJd
PM_useful_energy_delivered_ 15 mg/MJd
Summary
When pots have sufficient bottom surface area, using a Winiarski stovetop can result in high thermal efficiency. After one hour, the highest temperature of gases in the 5mm channel gap under the outer edges of the pot was 111C. Adding a skirt to the sides of the pot would not be help very much when gas temperatures are this low.
Perhaps cooks would appreciate institutional stoves without sunken pots?
Let’s see what happens?
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