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10.3.11
A Dictionary of Arts: Charcoal.
A Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures, and Mines; containing A Clear Exposition of Their Principles and Practice
by Andrew Ure, M. D.;
F. R. S. M. G. S. Lond.: M. Acad. M. S. Philad.; S. PH. DOC. N. GERM. Ranow.; Mulh. Etc. Etc.
Illustrated with nearly fifteen hundred engravings on wood
Eleventh American, From The Last London Edition.
To which is appended, a Supplement of Recent Improvements to The Present Time.
New York: D Appleton & company, 200 Broadway. Philadelphia: George S. Appleton, 148 Chestnut St.
MDCCCXLVII
1847
CHARCOAL. The fixed residuum of vegetables exposed to ignition out of contact of air. In the article CARBON, I have described the general properties of charcoal and the simplest mode of making it. I shall here detain the best systems of manufacturing this product upon the continent of Europe.
To carbonize wood under a moveable covering, the plan of meiler
or heaps, is employed very much in Germany. The wood is arranged either in horizontal layers, or in nearly vertical ones, with a slight slope, so as to form conical rounded heaps of different sizes. The former are called lying meiler, fig. 272; the latter standing meiler, figs. 272. and 274. Both are distributed in much the same way.
In districts where the wood can be transported into one place by means of rivers or mountain-slides, a dry flat space must be pitched upon, screened from storms and floods, which may be walled round, having a slight declivity made in the ground, toward the centre. See fig. 275. Into this space the tarry acid will partially fall, and may be conducted outward, through a covered gutter beneath, into a covered tank. The mouth of the tank must be shut, during the coaking, with an iron or stone slab, luted with clay. A square iron plate is placed over the inner orifice of the gutter, to prevent it being choked with coal ashes. Fig. 275 represents a walled meiler station; a, the station; b, the gutter; c, the tank, which is covered with the slab d; e, a slab clear of coals. The cover of the heaps is formed of earth, sand, ashes, or such other matter as may be most readily found in the woods. They should be kindled in the centre. From 6 days to 4 weeks may be required for charring a heap, according to its size; hard wood requiring most time; and the slower the process, the better and greater is the product, generally speaking.
Charring of wood in mounds (Haufe or liegende werke), figs. 276 and 277, differs from that in the meiler, because the wood in the haufe is successively charred, and the charcoal is raked out by little and little. The product is said to be greater in this way, and also better. Uncleft billets, 6 or 8 feet long, being laid over each other, are covered with ashes, and then carbonized. The station is sometimes horizontal, and sometimes made to slope. The length may be 24 feet, the breadth 8 feet; and the wood is laid crosswise. Piles are set perpendicularly to support the roof, made of boughs and leaves, covered with ashes. Pipes are occasionally laid within the upper part of the mounds, which serve to catch and carry off some of the liquid products into proper tanks.
Fig. 278 is a vertical section, and fig. 279, a half bird's-eye view, and half cross section, at the height of the pit-bottom, of Chabeaussiere's kiln for making wood charcoal. a is the oven; b, vertical air-pipes; c c, horizontal flues for admitting air to the kiln; d d, small pits which communicate by short horizontal pipes e e, with the vertical ones; f, the sole of the kiln, a circle of brickwork, upon which the cover or hood h reposes; i, a pipe which leads to the cistern k; l, the pipe destined for carrying off the gaseous matter; m m, holes in the iron cover or lid.
The distribution of the wood is like that in the horizontal meilers, or heaps; it is kindled in the central vertical canal with burning fuel, and the lid is covered with a few inches of earth. At the beginning of the operation all the draught flues are left open, but they are progressively closed, as occasion requires. In eight kilns of this kind, 500 decasters of oak wood are carbonized, from which 16,000 hectolitres of charcoal are obtained, equal to 64,000 pounds French, being about 25 per cent.; besides tar and 3000 velts of wood vinegar, or from 2° to 3° Baumé.
At Crouy upon the Ourcq, near Meaux, there is a well-constructed kiln for making turf-charcoal. It resembles most nearly a tar-kiln. In fig. 280, a is the cylindrical coaking place, whose surrounding walls are heated by the flame which passes through the intermediate space b. The place itself is divided by partitions of fire tiles into three stages, through the apertures in which the flames of the fire c c, rise, and heat the exterior of the coaking apartment. In order to confine the heat, there is in the enclosing walls of the outer kiln a cylindrical hollow space d, where the air is kept stagnant. Through the apertures left in the upper end at e, the turf is introduce; they are then shut with an iron plate f, which is covered with ashes or sand. The fire-place opens above this aperture, and its outlet is provided with a moveable iron cover g, in which there is a small hole for the issue of the gases. The sole of the kiln consists of a cast iron slab k, which may be raised by means of a hook i upon it. This is drawn back after the carbonization is completed, whereby the charcoal falls from the coaking space into a subjacent vault. The volatile products are carried off by the pipe k, and led into the condensing cistern; the gases escaping to the fire-place where they are burned. The iron slap is protected from the corrosion of the acid vapors by a layer of coal ashes.
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