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  2. Wood briquette - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_briquette

    Wood briquettes' ash and sulfur content varies. Some pure wood briquettes with the bark removed can have as low as an 0.3% ash content, while briquettes with added materials can have up to a 7% ash content. [2] Briquettes have a substantially higher energy content than logs per cubic foot due to their density, which means they take up less ...

  3. Dry dung fuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dry_dung_fuel

    Dry dung fuel (or dry manure fuel) is animal feces that has been dried in order to be used as a fuel source. It is used in many countries. It is used in many countries. Using dry manure as a fuel source is an example of reuse of human excreta . [ 1 ]

  4. Biomass briquettes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biomass_briquettes

    Biomass briquettes, mostly made of green waste and other organic materials, are commonly used for electricity generation, heat, and cooking fuel. These compressed compounds contain various organic materials, including rice husk, bagasse, ground nut shells, municipal solid waste, agricultural waste.

  5. Charcoal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charcoal

    Modern "charcoal" briquettes, widely used for outdoor cooking, are made with charcoal but may also include coal as an energy source as well as accelerants, binders and filler. To contain the charcoal and use it for cooking purposes, a barbecue grill may be used. A small Japanese charcoal grill is known as a shichirin.

  6. Briquette - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Briquette

    Charcoal briquettes sold for cooking food can include: [5] [6] Wood charcoal (fuel) Lignite coal (fuel) Anthracite coal (fuel) Limestone (ash colourant) Starch (binder) Borax (release agent) Sodium nitrate (accelerant) Sawdust; Wax (some brands: binder, accelerant, ignition facilitator). Chaff (rice chaff and peanut chaff)

  7. Ash (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ash_(chemistry)

    A crucible and tongs, on a green mat. The ash content of a sample is a measure of the amount of inorganic noncombustible material it contains. The residues after a sample is completely burnt - in contrast to the ash remaining after incomplete combustion - typically consist of oxides of the inorganic elements present in the original sample.

  8. Pellet fuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pellet_fuel

    The energy content of wood pellets is approximately 4.7 – 5.2 MWh/tonne [43] [44] (~7450 BTU/lb), 14.4-20.3 MJ/kg. [45] None of these three sets of values come even close to agreeing. High-efficiency wood pellet stoves and boilers have been developed in recent years, typically offering combustion efficiencies of over 85%. [ 46 ]

  9. East Asian coal briquettes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Asian_coal_briquettes

    East Asian coal briquettes (Japanese: 練炭, Hepburn: rentan), also known by the names yeontan (Korean: 연탄) or fēngwōméi (Chinese: 蜂窩煤; Chinese: 蜂窝煤, literally "beehive coal"), are coal briquettes used across East Asia for home cooking and residential home heating purposes. They were first invented in Japan, then propagated ...