This year our pond has produced an overabundance of algae, and instead of simply trying to do something
about the pond scum, I'm trying to figure out how to do something
with the pond scum. In addition to using it in the compost bin, I'm making bricks for our wood stove. To do this, I made a brick mold and filled it with muck that I scooped up out of the pond, slopped it into the wooden mold, then let the algae dry into lightweight bricks.
Watch the video of "
the burning of the algae."
Not the most flammable substance, but I think I'm on the right track. I'm hoping someone here knows how I can tweak the recipe for these alternative heating bricks so all this pond scum doesn't go to waste.
Thanks
Great idea! We may be needing all the alternative energy we can get if the recession continues...
May be what causes this:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=asian+brown+cloud&oq=asian+brown+cloud
People seem to think that burning stuff isn't "green". But what you are actually doing is harvesting carbon from the atmosphere to make heat, and some goes in the ground at the end, as well as the atmosphere.
I am thinking that there wouldn't be much ash compared to wood? As the algae wouldn't contain much?
We have a lot of algae blooms here in Australia, and we should explore this commercially I think as a way to sequester carbon from the air and make heat or power.
First thing to try is adding something more combustible to the mix.
Sawdust, coffee grounds, and paraffin are all popular commercial firelog additives.
Second suggestion would be, forget the "brick" molds, and go for puck, or stick molds.
It seems, from your video, the main problem you are having is related to mass vs air and heat.
Increase the air, increase the heat, or decrease the mass.
In much the same way that split wood burns faster/hotter than whole logs, using a drying form that increases the surface area per ounce of biomass will lead to "better" burns.
http://www.ecofilms.com.au/2011/08/21/soil-creation-on-the-edge/