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  2. Pulpwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulpwood

    Wood gasification (synthetic natural gas and biomass to liquid): synthesis gas production is done by wood smouldering. [4] Bioethanol: start off by the splitting of cellulose and hemicelluloses in sugar by enzymes and acids, then the fermentation of the sugar with the aid of microorganisms. Lastly, the distillation and dewatering creates the ...

  3. Combustibility and flammability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combustibility_and...

    Take wood as an example. Finely divided wood dust can undergo explosive flames and produce a blast wave. A piece of paper (made from wood) catches on fire quite easily. A heavy oak desk is much harder to ignite, even though the wood fibre is the same in all three materials.

  4. Wood gas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_gas

    The wood gas can then be filtered for tars and soot/ash particles, cooled and directed to an engine or fuel cell. [6] Most of these engines have strict purity requirements of the wood gas, so the gas often has to pass through extensive gas cleaning in order to remove or convert, i.e., "crack", tars and particles.

  5. Liquid fuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_fuel

    Gasoline is the most widely used liquid fuel. Gasoline, as it is known in United States and Canada, or petrol virtually everywhere else, is made of hydrocarbon molecules (compounds that contain hydrogen and carbon only) forming aliphatic compounds, or chains of carbons with hydrogen atoms attached.

  6. Wood gas generator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_gas_generator

    This project was an electric power plant with a wood gas generator and a gas engine to convert the wood gas into 2 MW electric power and 4.5 MW heat. There was also an experimental device to use the Fischer–Tropsch process to convert wood gas to a diesel-like fuel. By October 2005, it was possible to convert 5 kg of wood into 1 litre of fuel.

  7. Gasoline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gasoline

    Gasoline should ideally be stored in an airtight container (to prevent oxidation or water vapor mixing in with the gas) that can withstand the vapor pressure of the gasoline without venting (to prevent the loss of the more volatile fractions) at a stable cool temperature (to reduce the excess pressure from liquid expansion and to reduce the ...

  8. Producer gas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Producer_gas

    Blue gas burns with a blue flame and does not produce light except when used with a Welsbach gas mantle. Lowe's Water Gas: Water gas with a secondary pyrolysis reactor to introduce hydrocarbon gasses for illuminating purposes. [9] [10] Carburetted gas: Any gas produced by a process similar to Lowe's in which hydrocarbons are added for ...

  9. Pitch (resin) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitch_(resin)

    [A wood-based pitch] [note 1] is put into an earthen vessel, and it is put over a small fire in the sun, then some hot water percolated through wood-ashes is poured on it, and the pitch is stirred; when it has afterward stood, it is poured out after two hours, then there is as much water again poured in. Having therefore done this thrice every ...