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EP3640539A1 - Heating device using wood fuel - Google Patents

Heating device using wood fuel Download PDF

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Publication number
EP3640539A1
EP3640539A1 EP18817449.4A EP18817449A EP3640539A1 EP 3640539 A1 EP3640539 A1 EP 3640539A1 EP 18817449 A EP18817449 A EP 18817449A EP 3640539 A1 EP3640539 A1 EP 3640539A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
fuel
heating device
wood
gas duct
additional gas
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP18817449.4A
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Other versions
EP3640539A4 (en
Inventor
Mark SOLONIN
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Pyroheat Oue
Original Assignee
Pyroheat Oue
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Pyroheat Oue filed Critical Pyroheat Oue
Publication of EP3640539A1 publication Critical patent/EP3640539A1/en
Publication of EP3640539A4 publication Critical patent/EP3640539A4/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24HFLUID HEATERS, e.g. WATER OR AIR HEATERS, HAVING HEAT-GENERATING MEANS, e.g. HEAT PUMPS, IN GENERAL
    • F24H1/00Water heaters, e.g. boilers, continuous-flow heaters or water-storage heaters
    • F24H1/0063Water heaters, e.g. boilers, continuous-flow heaters or water-storage heaters using solid fuel
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23BMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR COMBUSTION USING ONLY SOLID FUEL
    • F23B10/00Combustion apparatus characterised by the combination of two or more combustion chambers
    • F23B10/02Combustion apparatus characterised by the combination of two or more combustion chambers including separate secondary combustion chambers
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23BMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR COMBUSTION USING ONLY SOLID FUEL
    • F23B5/00Combustion apparatus with arrangements for burning uncombusted material from primary combustion
    • F23B5/02Combustion apparatus with arrangements for burning uncombusted material from primary combustion in main combustion chamber
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23BMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR COMBUSTION USING ONLY SOLID FUEL
    • F23B50/00Combustion apparatus in which the fuel is fed into or through the combustion zone by gravity, e.g. from a fuel storage situated above the combustion zone
    • F23B50/02Combustion apparatus in which the fuel is fed into or through the combustion zone by gravity, e.g. from a fuel storage situated above the combustion zone the fuel forming a column, stack or thick layer with the combustion zone at its bottom
    • F23B50/06Combustion apparatus in which the fuel is fed into or through the combustion zone by gravity, e.g. from a fuel storage situated above the combustion zone the fuel forming a column, stack or thick layer with the combustion zone at its bottom the flue gases being removed downwards through one or more openings in the fuel-supporting surface
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23BMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR COMBUSTION USING ONLY SOLID FUEL
    • F23B7/00Combustion techniques; Other solid-fuel combustion apparatus
    • F23B7/002Combustion techniques; Other solid-fuel combustion apparatus characterised by gas flow arrangements
    • F23B7/005Combustion techniques; Other solid-fuel combustion apparatus characterised by gas flow arrangements with downdraught through fuel bed and grate
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23BMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR COMBUSTION USING ONLY SOLID FUEL
    • F23B80/00Combustion apparatus characterised by means creating a distinct flow path for flue gases or for non-combusted gases given off by the fuel
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23BMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR COMBUSTION USING ONLY SOLID FUEL
    • F23B90/00Combustion methods not related to a particular type of apparatus
    • F23B90/04Combustion methods not related to a particular type of apparatus including secondary combustion
    • F23B90/06Combustion methods not related to a particular type of apparatus including secondary combustion the primary combustion being a gasification or pyrolysis in a reductive atmosphere
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24BDOMESTIC STOVES OR RANGES FOR SOLID FUELS; IMPLEMENTS FOR USE IN CONNECTION WITH STOVES OR RANGES
    • F24B13/00Details solely applicable to stoves or ranges burning solid fuels 
    • F24B13/04Arrangements for feeding solid fuel, e.g. hoppers 
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24BDOMESTIC STOVES OR RANGES FOR SOLID FUELS; IMPLEMENTS FOR USE IN CONNECTION WITH STOVES OR RANGES
    • F24B9/00Stoves, ranges or flue-gas ducts, with additional provisions for heating water 
    • F24B9/006Stoves, ranges or flue-gas ducts, with additional provisions for heating water  flue-gas ducts
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24HFLUID HEATERS, e.g. WATER OR AIR HEATERS, HAVING HEAT-GENERATING MEANS, e.g. HEAT PUMPS, IN GENERAL
    • F24H8/00Fluid heaters characterised by means for extracting latent heat from flue gases by means of condensation
    • F24H8/006Means for removing condensate from the heater
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23BMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR COMBUSTION USING ONLY SOLID FUEL
    • F23B2700/00Combustion apparatus for solid fuel
    • F23B2700/018Combustion apparatus for solid fuel with fume afterburning by staged combustion
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23BMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR COMBUSTION USING ONLY SOLID FUEL
    • F23B2900/00Special features of, or arrangements for combustion apparatus using solid fuels; Combustion processes therefor
    • F23B2900/00001Combustion chambers with integrated fuel hopper

Definitions

  • the utility model relates to heat power engineering, in particular to heating devices, in which solid fuel of plant origin (firewood, wood waste, chips, straw) is subjected to high-temperature gasification (pyrolysis) followed by combustion of pyrolysis gases and coal residue.
  • solid fuel of plant origin firewood, wood waste, chips, straw
  • pyrolysis high-temperature gasification
  • the prior art describes a heating device (boiler), which comprises a wood fuel hopper, a gasification chamber (primary combustion chamber) and an afterburner consisting of one or two compartments located below or to the side of the gasification chamber (primary combustion chamber), placed in a single vertically oriented housing.
  • a heating device which comprises a wood fuel hopper, a gasification chamber (primary combustion chamber) and an afterburner consisting of one or two compartments located below or to the side of the gasification chamber (primary combustion chamber), placed in a single vertically oriented housing.
  • the majority of commercially available wood fuel boilers are made according to this scheme, for example, products manufactured by ARCA, Astra, Atmos, Attack, Buderus, Cichewic, Guntamatic, Kalvis, Schutechnik, Kostrzewa, Orlan, Solarbayer, Viessmann.
  • the prior art describes several technical solutions that allow using wood with high moisture content as fuel for a household heating device of small power (20-100 kW).
  • the fundamental basis of the technical solution is to create and maintain a high temperature (700-800 °C or more) in the gasification chamber (primary combustion chamber) at which water vapor in contact with hot coal turns into two combustible gases: hydrogen and carbon monoxide.
  • the pyrolysis gas afterburner is placed inside the gasification chamber (see EP 2 821 698 A1 ), or the pyrolysis gas afterburner is made in the form of a ring concentrically surrounding the gasification chamber (see DE 3411822 A1 and RU 2578550 C1 ), or a stream of hot combustion products leaving the pyrolysis gas afterburner rises and at the same time washes and heats the side walls of the gasification chamber (see CZ 2008191 A3 ).
  • the prior art also describes a heating device in which the above-mentioned heating methods are supplemented by blowing very hot primary air into the gasification chamber at high speed (see RU 164691 U1 ).
  • a permanent design flaw is that small doses of wood pyrolysis products, including carbon monoxide, which are inevitably present in a mixture with water vapor, are also emitted into the atmosphere. In the 30-40s this did not hold any significance, but since then, the requirements for the ecological cleanliness of heating devices have been significantly stricter. So, the Soviet standard from the 80s for wood stoves (GOST 9817-82) limited the permissible carbon monoxide emissions to 4%, but the modern European standard EN 303-5 for class 5 requires a reduction in carbon monoxide emissions to 0.04%. It is not always possible to reduce carbon monoxide emissions to such a level even with the use of complex after-combustion chambers; all the more it is impossible to meet the strict modern standards by discharging the contents of the gas environment of the fuel hopper directly into the atmosphere.
  • the technical result for achieving the claimed utility model is the sustainable and environmentally friendly burning of wood fuel with a natural (i.e. high) moisture content.
  • a heating device using wood fuel comprising placed in a single vertically oriented housing a hopper for solid fuel and a gasification chamber below it, an afterburner, as well as primary and secondary air supply ducts, an exhaust chimney and a water tank, inside which a fire tube heat exchanger is placed, which has at least one vertically oriented additional gas duct, the upper opening of which is located at the upper point of the internal volume of the fuel hopper, and the lower opening is located in the area of the afterburner, where the combustion of the flame ends.
  • At least one gas collection funnel can be installed in the upper part of the fuel hopper, the upper point of which is connected to the upper opening of the additional gas duct.
  • a shut-off and control valve may be inserted into the additional duct.
  • the additional gas duct can be at least partially placed inside the water tank, while a container for collecting condensate with a device for draining condensate out of the heating device is placed at the bottom of the part of the additional gas duct that is placed in water.
  • the claimed device can be manufactured with standard equipment using known and traditional heating devices, technological processes and materials.
  • the claimed utility model meets the criterion of industrial applicability.
  • FIG. 1 shows a vertical section of the version having a gas collection funnel but no condensate collecting tank.
  • the heating device comprises a solid fuel hopper 1 with a loading hatch 12, gasification zone (chamber) 2 located in the lower part of the hopper, afterburner 3, primary air supply ducts 4, secondary air supply ducts 5, water tank 6 housing a fire-tube heat exchanger 7 connected to the smoke exhauster 8 via the outlet chimney.
  • the heating device operates as follows. Wood fuel 11 (for example, firewood or wood chips with a natural moisture content) is loaded into the hopper 1 through the loading hatch 12 on the side wall of the hopper. Due to gravity, the wood fuel falls down, successively passing through the drying zone (upper part of the hopper), the dry distillation zone (lower part of the hopper) and enters the gasification zone (chamber) 2. In this zone, the fuel is ignited from an external source (not shown) and burns in the atmosphere of primary air supplied to the gasification and primary combustion zones through duct 4.
  • Wood fuel 11 for example, firewood or wood chips with a natural moisture content
  • Combustible gases (hydrogen, methane, carbon monoxide), formed as a result of primary pyrolysis of wood and chemical reduction after contact with hot coal, enter the afterburner 3, where they are mixed with secondary air entering through duct 5 and burned in the flame 13.
  • the hot combustion products from the afterburner enter the fire tube 7, where they transfer their heat to the water in tank 6 and are then discharged into the exhaust pipe with a smoke exhauster 8 , from there into the chimney (not shown) and then to the atmosphere.
  • the movement of water vapor from the top of the additional gas duct 9 to the bottom occurs under the influence of rarefaction (differential pressure) created by the smoke exhauster 8 in the afterburner 3; furthermore, the difference in the specific gravity of the steam having a temperature of 100-120 °C and the combustion products in the afterburner having a temperature of more than 800-900 °C contributes to the movement of steam from the top of the additional gas duct 9 to the bottom.
  • the removal of or at least a significant reduction in the amount of water vapor in the primary combustion zone contributes to the sustainable burning of wood fuel.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Thermal Sciences (AREA)
  • Solid-Fuel Combustion (AREA)

Abstract

The patent application relates to thermal power engineering, particularly to heating devices in which wood fuel undergoes high-temperature gasification (pyrolysis). The problem which the claimed utility model addresses is that of the consistent and environmentally clean combustion of wood fuel possessing a natural (that is, high) moisture content. The technical result is achieved in that the device includes a vertically-oriented additional gas duct through which the moisture contained in the fuel is removed in the form of steam from the upper part of a fuel hopper to a flame in an afterburn chamber, wherein carbon monoxide mixed with steam is burned off and does not enter the atmosphere.

Description

  • The utility model relates to heat power engineering, in particular to heating devices, in which solid fuel of plant origin (firewood, wood waste, chips, straw) is subjected to high-temperature gasification (pyrolysis) followed by combustion of pyrolysis gases and coal residue.
  • The prior art describes a heating device (boiler), which comprises a wood fuel hopper, a gasification chamber (primary combustion chamber) and an afterburner consisting of one or two compartments located below or to the side of the gasification chamber (primary combustion chamber), placed in a single vertically oriented housing. The majority of commercially available wood fuel boilers are made according to this scheme, for example, products manufactured by ARCA, Astra, Atmos, Attack, Buderus, Cichewic, Guntamatic, Kalvis, Heiztechnik, Kostrzewa, Orlan, Solarbayer, Viessmann.
  • In such a device, the products of wood fuel gasification, including water vapor released in the upper part of the fuel hopper, move downwards and enter the primary combustion chamber. Moreover, water vapor prevents the effective mixing of atmospheric oxygen with the combustible components of the pyrolysis gas, which makes the combustion process unstable or completely impossible. As a result, all the heating devices listed above can use only wood with a moisture content of not more than 15-20% as fuel.
  • This limitation significantly complicates the operation of the heating device and increases its cost, since wood with natural moisture (for example, freshly sawn firewood) has a moisture content of about 45-60%, and in order to use it as fuel, long-term drying is required. Some types of wood fuel, such as wood chips from freshly sawn trees, cannot be dried naturally (this is prevented by the development of decay on raw wood chips), and therefore cannot be used in a domestic heating device.
  • The prior art describes several technical solutions that allow using wood with high moisture content as fuel for a household heating device of small power (20-100 kW). The fundamental basis of the technical solution is to create and maintain a high temperature (700-800 °C or more) in the gasification chamber (primary combustion chamber) at which water vapor in contact with hot coal turns into two combustible gases: hydrogen and carbon monoxide. To achieve this temperature, the pyrolysis gas afterburner is placed inside the gasification chamber (see EP 2 821 698 A1 ), or the pyrolysis gas afterburner is made in the form of a ring concentrically surrounding the gasification chamber (see DE 3411822 A1 and RU 2578550 C1 ), or a stream of hot combustion products leaving the pyrolysis gas afterburner rises and at the same time washes and heats the side walls of the gasification chamber (see CZ 2008191 A3 ). The prior art also describes a heating device in which the above-mentioned heating methods are supplemented by blowing very hot primary air into the gasification chamber at high speed (see RU 164691 U1 ).
  • The disadvantage of such designs is the inevitable use of expensive materials, in this case: heat-resistant steel and special heat-resistant ceramics. In addition, numerous tests have shown that even using all the above-mentioned methods of heating the gasification zone (primary combustion zone) does not provide the sustainable burning of particularly complex types of wood fuel, such as freshly chopped wood chips or raw sawdust.
  • The closest to the claimed heating device is the so-called "Pomerantsev high-speed combustion chamber" (see V.V. Pomerantsev, "
    Figure imgb0001
    ", M., Mashgiz, 1948; USSR copyright certificate No. 50503, filed May 19, 1936). In the upper part of the fuel hopper (Pomerantsev called it "fuel mine" or "fuel hose"), an opening was made through which "wet gas" was sucked out of the fuel hopper under the influence of rarefaction in the outlet chimney and was discharged into the atmosphere together with flue gases through a special gas duct.
  • The operability of this design is based on the fact that water vapor is the lightest component in the gas environment of the fuel hopper: it is 2.4 times lighter than carbon dioxide, 1.6 times lighter than nitrogen, 1.5 times lighter than carbon monoxide, and therefore accumulates in the upper part of the fuel hopper. Direct mechanical removal of water vapor is the most radical and at the same time a simple and inexpensive way to solve the problem of burning damp fuel, and this is a significant advantage of the "Pomerantsev furnace".
  • A permanent design flaw is that small doses of wood pyrolysis products, including carbon monoxide, which are inevitably present in a mixture with water vapor, are also emitted into the atmosphere. In the 30-40s this did not hold any significance, but since then, the requirements for the ecological cleanliness of heating devices have been significantly stricter. So, the Soviet standard from the 80s for wood stoves (GOST 9817-82)
    limited the permissible carbon monoxide emissions to 4%, but the modern European standard EN 303-5 for class 5 requires a reduction in carbon monoxide emissions to 0.04%. It is not always possible to reduce carbon monoxide emissions to such a level even with the use of complex after-combustion chambers; all the more it is impossible to meet the strict modern standards by discharging the contents of the gas environment of the fuel hopper directly into the atmosphere.
  • The technical result for achieving the claimed utility model is the sustainable and environmentally friendly burning of wood fuel with a natural (i.e. high) moisture content.
  • The specified technical result is achieved by a heating device using wood fuel comprising placed in a single vertically oriented housing a hopper for solid fuel and a gasification chamber below it, an afterburner, as well as primary and secondary air supply ducts, an exhaust chimney and a water tank, inside which a fire tube heat exchanger is placed,
    which has at least one vertically oriented additional gas duct, the upper opening of which is located at the upper point of the internal volume of the fuel hopper, and the lower opening is located in the area of the afterburner, where the combustion of the flame ends.
  • At least one gas collection funnel can be installed in the upper part of the fuel hopper, the upper point of which is connected to the upper opening of the additional gas duct.
  • A shut-off and control valve may be inserted into the additional duct. The additional gas duct can be at least partially placed inside the water tank, while a container for collecting condensate with a device for draining condensate out of the heating device is placed at the bottom of the part of the additional gas duct that is placed in water.
  • These design solutions ensure the achievement of the claimed technical result and cannot be found in their totality in any of the known heating devices using wood fuel, therefore, the claimed utility model meets the criterion of novelty.
  • The claimed device can be manufactured with standard equipment using known and traditional heating devices, technological processes and materials. Thus, the claimed utility model meets the criterion of industrial applicability.
  • The design of the claimed heating device is illustrated by the sketch on FIG. 1, which shows a vertical section of the version having a gas collection funnel but no condensate collecting tank.
  • The heating device comprises a solid fuel hopper 1 with a loading hatch 12, gasification zone (chamber) 2 located in the lower part of the hopper, afterburner 3, primary air supply ducts 4, secondary air supply ducts 5, water tank 6 housing a fire-tube heat exchanger 7 connected to the smoke exhauster 8 via the outlet chimney. The additional gas duct 9, connected in its upper part to the gas collection funnel 10, passes downwards to the afterburner, and its lower opening is located at the end of the flame (along the direction of movement of combustible gases).
  • The heating device operates as follows. Wood fuel 11 (for example, firewood or wood chips with a natural moisture content) is loaded into the hopper 1 through the loading hatch 12 on the side wall of the hopper. Due to gravity, the wood fuel falls down, successively passing through the drying zone (upper part of the hopper), the dry distillation zone (lower part of the hopper) and enters the gasification zone (chamber) 2. In this zone, the fuel is ignited from an external source (not shown) and burns in the atmosphere of primary air supplied to the gasification and primary combustion zones through duct 4.
  • Combustible gases (hydrogen, methane, carbon monoxide), formed as a result of primary pyrolysis of wood and chemical reduction after contact with hot coal, enter the afterburner 3, where they are mixed with secondary air entering through duct 5 and burned in the flame 13. The hot combustion products from the afterburner enter the fire tube 7, where they transfer their heat to the water in tank 6 and are then discharged into the exhaust pipe with a smoke exhauster 8 , from there into the chimney (not shown) and then to the atmosphere.
  • Moisture evaporating from raw wood in the form of water vapor with a temperature of 100-120 °C rises ("floats") to the upper part of the fuel hopper 1 and enters the additional gas duct 9 through a gas collection funnel 10. The movement of water vapor from the top of the additional gas duct 9 to the bottom occurs under the influence of rarefaction (differential pressure) created by the smoke exhauster 8 in the afterburner 3; furthermore, the difference in the specific gravity of the steam having a temperature of 100-120 °C and the combustion products in the afterburner having a temperature of more than 800-900 °C contributes to the movement of steam from the top of the additional gas duct 9 to the bottom. The removal of or at least a significant reduction in the amount of water vapor in the primary combustion zone, contributes to the sustainable burning of wood fuel.
  • Water vapor through the additional gas duct 9 is supplied to the end point of the torch 13 (in the direction of movement of the combustible gases). In this zone, the mixing of combustible gases and the secondary air has already been completed, and therefore the appearance of water vapor will not interfere with the combustion process. Carbon monoxide, a certain amount of which will inevitably be present in the stream of water vapor, caught in the zone of high temperatures (more than 900 °C) in the most heated part of the torch 13 burns in the secondary air.
  • The complete afterburning of carbon monoxide is also promoted by water vapor, which reacts with carbon monoxide at high temperatures according to the formula: H2O + CO = H2 + CO2. As a result of the reaction, two gases harmless to human health are formed (hydrogen and carbon dioxide). This reaction is accompanied by heat, and thus does not interfere with the main combustion process in the afterburner. In addition, at high temperatures, water vapor reacts with the smallest particles of unburned coal (soot) and burns them according to the formula: H2O + C = H2 + CO, and an insignificant amount of carbon monoxide resulting from the reaction is burned according to the reactions described above. The possibility for destroying (afterburning) the smallest particles of coal (soot) is very important, because according to modern data, these particles are a strong carcinogen, and their content in flue gases should be strictly limited.

Claims (4)

  1. A heating device using wood fuel, comprising placed in a single vertically oriented housing a fuel hopper and a gasification chamber below it, an afterburner, as well as primary and secondary air supply ducts, a water tank, inside which there is a fire-tube heat exchanger connected to the outlet chimney, wherein it contains at least one vertically oriented additional gas duct, the upper opening of which is located at the upper point of the internal volume of the fuel hopper, and the lower opening is located in the area of the afterburner, where the combustion of the flame ends.
  2. The heating device using wood fuel according to claim 1, wherein at least one gas collection funnel is installed in the upper part of the fuel hopper, the upper point of which is connected to the upper opening of the additional gas duct.
  3. The heating device using wood fuel according to claim 1, wherein a shut-off and control valve is embedded in the additional gas duct.
  4. The heating device using wood fuel according to claim 1, wherein the additional gas duct is at least partially located inside the water tank, while a container for collecting condensate with a device for draining condensate out of the heating device is located at the bottom of the part of the additional gas duct that is placed in water.
EP18817449.4A 2017-06-16 2018-05-04 Heating device using wood fuel Withdrawn EP3640539A4 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
RU2017121196 2017-06-16
PCT/RU2018/000287 WO2018231098A1 (en) 2017-06-16 2018-05-04 Heating device using wood fuel

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP3640539A1 true EP3640539A1 (en) 2020-04-22
EP3640539A4 EP3640539A4 (en) 2021-03-03

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EP (1) EP3640539A4 (en)
CA (1) CA3074239A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2018231098A1 (en)

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GB2640677A (en) * 2024-04-30 2025-11-05 Peter Binstead Ronald Heat exchange assembly for stove

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EP3640539A4 (en) 2021-03-03
CA3074239A1 (en) 2018-12-20
WO2018231098A1 (en) 2018-12-20
US20200158375A1 (en) 2020-05-21

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