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Visits & Practical Workshops

Wood Industries

For Governments, Ministries

Citycouncils

District Heating Plants

Choice of System Size

Plant Technology

Wood Chip Storage

Handling of Fuel

Feeding Systems

Combustion Chamber and Boiler

Combustion Quality

Chimney

Handling of Ash

Fire Protection

Control, Adjustment,and Supervision

Plant Manpower

For Investors, Banking, Capital

Farmers

Videoschool

Biogasplants

Wood Gasification Boilers 15 kW to 2.000 kW

Straw Gasification Boilers 100 kW to 20.000 kW

Wood chip Boilers 30 kW to 10.000 kW

Pellet Boilers and Pellet Plants

Solar Cooling

Solar Heating

Solar Power

Combined Heat a. Power Generators 5 kW to 5MW

Gas Absorption Heating Pumps

Direct Fired Gas Absorption Chillers

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Wood chips contain 0.5-2.0% of the dry weight in the form of incombustible minerals which are turned into ash in the combustion process. The ash is handled automatically at all district heating plants.
The manual work in connection with the ash system is limited to ordinary inspections and intervention in case of operations
stoppage. The composition of wood ash means that slagging is not a widespread phenomenon at wood chip-fired heating plants.
The ash drops from the grate onto an ash conveyor or other ash collection system. The sludge from the flue gas condensate contains a large amount of
heavy metal and is collected separately for later disposal.
The ash system may be arranged as a wet or dry ash system. A wet ash system is a dual function system, since it is efficient as a trap hindering false air
entering the boiler at the same time as extinguishing glowing ash. A drawback of the system is the heavy weight ash in the ash container and the corrosion resulting from the wet ash. The emptying of the containers varies with the consumption of wood chips, i.e., from approx. every second week to once every three months.