Claims
- 1. In a biomass heating system comprising:
(a) a vessel constructed and arranged to define a first chamber for containing a quantity of biomass material for undergoing aerobic decomposition to thereby generate heat energy in the biomass material, (b) an adjacent structure defining a second chamber containing a fluid to be heated, said system being characterized by the improvement in combination therewith of: (c) a heat pipe having an evaporator section disposed in operable heat transfer relation to the biomass material in said vessel and having a condenser section in operable heat transfer relation with the fluid in said second chamber to thereby transfer, by change of phase of a fluid internally contained within said heat pipe, the heat energy generated by decomposition of the biomass material from the first chamber to the fluid of said second chamber to thereby heat such fluid.
- 2. The system of claim 1 wherein said vessel comprises a container having a longitudinal axis and a generally cylinder configuration generally coaxial with such longitudinal axis in at least a lowermost portion thereof for containing the biomass material,
a plurality of auger blades disposed generally co-axially with and within said container and rotationally operable in the lowermost portion thereof for moving the biomass material axially within the container in response to rotation of said auger blades about an axis parallel to the container, said container having biomass material loading and unloading openings spaced apart axially of the container axis, and wherein said heat pipe evaporator section is disposed in heat transfer relation with the biomass material in said container and extends with its longitudinal axis generally parallel to the container longitudinal axis between said container openings.
- 3. The system of claim 2 wherein said heat pipe evaporator section is embedded in a masonry structure forming said lowermost portion of said container.
- 4. The system of claim 2 wherein said heat pipe evaporator section is disposed within said container.
- 5. The system of claim 4 wherein said heat pipe evaporator section is disposed centrally and generally coaxially of said container.
- 6. The system of claim 5 wherein said container comprises a rotary tubular structure and said auger blades are affixed to the inner surface of said container so as to revolve around said heat pipe evaporator section in response rotation of said tubular container structure.
- 7. The system of claim 5 wherein said heat pipe evaporator section has said auger blades affixed to the exterior thereof and said heat pipe is operably supported for and driven in rotation about its longitudinal axis to cause said rotation of said auger blades.
- 8. The system of claim 7 wherein said heat pipe condenser section has external heat-conductive fins attached thereto and is disposed in the second chamber fluid.
- 9. The system of claim 8 wherein said fluid comprises water.
- 10. The system of claim 2 wherein said vessel container and said heat pipe are inclined slightly upwardly from the first chamber to the second chamber such that said heat pipe is operable in a diode mode for one-way two-phase heat exchange from said first chamber to said second chamber.
- 11. The system of claim 1 wherein said vessel comprises a planar masonry floor pad structure having a generally horizontal upper surface for receiving biomass material thereon and wherein a plurality of said heat pipes are arrayed in spaced apart generally parallel relation with said evaporator section of each said heat pipe disposed generally parallel to said floor pad upper surface and in operable non-contacting heat conductive relation to the biomass material received on said pad upper surface.
- 12. The system of claim 11 wherein said evaporator sections are embedded in said masonry floor pad structure.
- 13. The system of claim 11 wherein a biomass aeration system is provided having branch air conduits extending parallel to and disposed between said evaporator sections, said branch conduits having air ports oriented for feeding or withdrawing air from the biomass material resting on said pad upper surface.
- 14 The system of claim 13 wherein said vessel comprises a basement biomass first pit and said pad comprises the floor of said pit, and wherein said air conduits comprise at least one riser conduit having an air inlet open to exterior atmosphere generally at ground level and an air outlet communicating with a manifold conduit, said manifold conduit in turn communicating with said branch air conduits that in turn are disposed on said masonry floor pad structure.
- 15. The system of claim 14 wherein said second chamber structure adjacent said vessel comprises a basement plenum second pit adjacent said first pit and separated therefrom by a vertical mid wall, said heat pipes extending in sealed relation through said mid wall with said condenser section of each said heat pipe disposed in said second pit in heat exchange relation with the atmosphere therein, said system further including a greenhouse disposed above said second pit in air convection heat exchange relation with said second pit.
- 16. The system of claim 15 wherein said second pit is loosely filled with an array of masonry hollow core blocks disposed around and above said condenser sections and said greenhouse has an air permeable floor supported on said blocks.
- 17. The system set forth in claim 16 wherein said pad floor of said first pit has embedded therein a plurality of metal L-cross-section plates each having a horizontal flange embedded closely beneath an individually associated adjacent heat pipe evaporator section and a vertical flange protruding upwardly out of the pad upper surface and into heat conductive relation with the biomass material receiving space in said first pit.
- 18. The system set forth in claim 16 wherein said heat pipe condenser sections are elevated above the elevation of said heat pipe evaporator sections such that heat pipes are operable in a diode mode for one-way two phase heat exchange from said first pit to said second pit.
- 19. The system set forth in claim 13 wherein said vessel comprises a trench-like elongated composting channel with said masonry floor pad structure forming the bottom wall of said channel, said bottom wall upper surface being bounded respectively along its laterally spaced first and second side edges by a pair of laterally spaced first and second upright sidewalls, said air conduits also being embedded in said bottom wall floor pad structure, said second chamber structure comprising a tank for containing said fluid and being disposed alongside said channel with said channel first sidewall forming one of a pair of laterally spaced apart longitudinally extending first and second sidewalls of said tank.
- 20. The system of claim 19 wherein said heat pipes extend from said channel said first edge in sealed relation into said tank with said condenser section of each said heat pipe being disposed in heat exchange relation with the fluid contained in said tank.
- 21. The system as set forth in claim 20 wherein said channel is covered by a tent-like hood extending between the sidewalls of the channel and above and over the uppermost level of the biomass material received in said channel, said tent-like hood being constructed and arranged for capturing the vapors issuing upwardly from the top surface of the biomass material in the channel.
- 22. The system set forth in claim 21 wherein said tent-like hood over said channel is constructed and arranged to be sealed so as to be capable of being air pressurized to approximately 2 to 4 inches of water for thereby likewise pressurizing the biomass material by air forced through said air conduits upwardly into the biomass material.
- 23. The system as set forth in claim 22 wherein a second array of heat pipes are disposed to extend generally horizontally with their evaporator sections in the headspace above the uppermost surface of the biomass material and the undersurface of said tent-hood, and with the condenser section of each said second array heat pipe extending generally parallel to the condenser section of each said first-mentioned array heat pipe and being disposed in a fluid-containing tank in heat exchange relation with the fluid therein.
- 24. The system of claim 23 wherein the tank receiving the condenser sections of the second array of heat pipes is the same tank as the tank receiving the condenser sections of the first array of heat pipes.
- 25. The system of claim 21 wherein said channel is covered by a liquid impermeable and gas-selective permeable membrane disposed above the uppermost level of the biomass material receiving space in said channel, said membrane being selected to selectively pass only water vapor and CO2 from the atmosphere beneath the membrane and issuing from the decomposing biomass material into the headspace above the membrane and below the tent-hood roof, and including a second array of heat pipes disposed with their evaporator sections supported in the space between said membrane and said hood-roof and with their condenser sections extending into a fluid-containing tank for heat exchange with the fluid in the tank, and wherein said air conduits are operable to admit an atmosphere containing oxygen at a super-atmospheric pressure upwardly into and through the biomass material in said channel and thereby pressurize the headspace under said membrane sufficiently to lift said membrane into an upwardly bowed configuration and to likewise pressurize the biomass material.
- 26. The system of claim 25 wherein said second array of heat pipes disposed in the headspace between said membrane and underside of said tent-hood have their condenser sections extending into said first-mentioned tank containing said fluid in heat exchange relationship with the condenser sections of the first-mentioned array of heat pipes.
- 27. The system of claim 26 wherein water collecting trough means are provided alongside the side edges of said membrane to collect the water vapor condensing in the headspace between the membrane and the tent-hood undersurface.
- 28. The system of claim 21 further including a ventilation duct having an inlet communicating with the headspace under said tent-hood and over said biomass in said channel and cooperating with a suction/blower means for withdrawing vapor from the tent-hood headspace, and a biomass filtering unit communicating with the outlet of said duct so that the withdrawn vapor issues through the biomass filter and then issues from the outlet of the filter.
- 29. The system of claim 19 wherein said vessel also comprises a second trench-like elongated composting channel that is generally a structural duplicate of said first-mentioned composting channel, said second channel being constructed and arranged with the one of its sidewalls closest to the first channel forming a common wall with the other one the pair of longitudinal sidewalls of said tank, a third array of heat pipes having evaporator sections embedded in the second channel bottom wall and their condenser sections being disposed in a fluid-containing tank.
- 30. The system of claim 29 wherein said third array heat pipes extend from said channel first side edge in sealed relation into said tank, said tank being the same tank as said first-mentioned tank, with the condenser section of each said third array heat pipe being disposed in heat exchange relation with the fluid contained in said tank.
- 31. The system as set forth in claim 30, wherein said second channel is covered by a second tent-like hood extending between the sidewalls of said second channel and above and over the uppermost level of the biomass material received in said second channel, said tent-like hood being constructed and arranged for capturing the vapors issuing upwardly from the top surface of the biomass material in said second channel.
- 32. The system set forth in claim 31 wherein said second tent-like hood is constructed and arranged to be sealed so as to be capable of being air pressurized to approximately 2 to 4 inches of water for thereby likewise pressurizing the second channel biomass material by air forced through said second channel air conduits upwardly into the second channel biomass material.
- 33. The system as set forth in claim 32 wherein a fourth array of heat pipes are disposed to extend generally horizontally with their evaporator sections in the headspace above the uppermost surface of the second channel biomass material and the undersurface of said second tent-hood, and with the condenser section of each said fourth array heat pipe extending generally parallel to the condenser section of each said third array heat pipe and being disposed in a fluid-containing tank in heat exchange relation with the fluid therein.
- 34. The system of claim 33 wherein the tank receiving the condenser sections of the fourth array of heat pipes is the same tank as the tank receiving the condenser sections of the third array of heat pipes.
- 35. The system of claim 31 wherein said second channel is covered by a liquid impermeable and gas-selective permeable second membrane disposed above the uppermost level of the biomass material receiving space in said second channel, said second membrane being selected to selectively pass only water vapor and CO2 from the atmosphere beneath the second membrane and issuing from the second channel decomposing biomass material into the headspace above the second membrane and below the second tent-hood roof, and including a third array of heat pipes disposed with their evaporator sections supported in the space between said second membrane and said second hood-roof and with their condenser sections extending into a fluid-containing tank for heat exchange with the fluid in the tank, and wherein said second channel air conduits are operable to admit an atmosphere containing oxygen at super-atmospheric pressure upwardly into and through the biomass material in the second channel and thereby pressurize the headspace under said second membrane to thereby lift said second membrane into an upwardly bowed configuration and to likewise pressurize the second channel biomass material.
- 36. The system of claim 35 wherein said fourth array of heat pipes disposed in the space between said second membrane and underside said second tent-hood have their condenser sections extending into said first-mentioned tank containing said fluid in heat exchange relationship with the condenser sections of the first, second and third arrays of heat pipes.
- 37. The system of claim 36 wherein water collecting trough means are provided alongside the side edges of said second membrane to collect the water vapor condensing in the headspace between said second membrane and the second tent-hood undersurface.
- 38. The system of claim 31 further including a second ventilation duct having an inlet communicating with the headspace under said second tent-hood and over said biomass in said second channel and cooperating with a suction/blower means for withdrawing vapor from the second tent-hood headspace, and a biomass filtering unit communicating with the outlet of said second duct so that the withdrawn vapor issues through the biomass filter and then issues from the outlet of the filter.
- 39. The system of claim 12 wherein said vessel comprises a plurality of parallel side-by-side trench-like elongated composting channels with said masonry floor pad structure forming the bottom wall of all of the said plurality of said channels and with a plurality of upright sidewalls serving as dividers between said channels and positioned upright on said floor pad structure, said system including an aeration system with air supply outlets opening into the masonry floor pad structure in each of said side-by-side channels for forcing air up through biomass material received in each of said channels, said system including a compost turner mechanism that travels on the top edge of said sidewalls for turning the compost in each of the channels and advancing the same, the channels being open at their longitudinally opposite ends, one end being a compost receiving end and the other being a compost discharge end, a discharge conveyor running transversely to the lengths of the channels for receiving compost ejected from the discharge ends of said channels and carrying it away, a fluid-receiving tank extending adjacent the outlet ends of the plurality of channels and having the condenser sections of said heat pipes extending into the fluid-receiving area of the tank for heat exchange with the fluid contained in the tank, said floor pad and channel structure and said tank being all enclosed under an inflatable tent dome covering held inflated by the air pressure of said aeration system supplying air into the biomass and issuing from the biomass into the headspace over the biomass and under said tent dome, said aeration system including a suction/blower in the headspace under the inflated tent for withdrawing atmosphere therein and supplying the same to an adjacent greenhouse structure via a first duct having an outlet communicating with the atmospheric space of the adjacent greenhouse, said aeration system having a second duct with an inlet communicating with a lower elevation area in the atmosphere in the greenhouse and an outlet communicating with said air supply outlets so that the aeration system is coupled in a closed loop system for continuous circulation from the dome headspace into the greenhouse atmosphere, thence out of the greenhouse atmosphere and back into the bottom of the biomass material and thence up through the biomass material into the dome headspace again.
- 40. The system of claim 12 wherein said vessel comprises a plurality of parallel side-by-side trench-like elongated composting channels with said masonry floor pad structure forming the bottom wall of all of the said plurality of said channels and with a plurality of upright sidewalls serving as dividers between said channels and positioned upright on said floor pad structure, said system including a compost turner mechanism that travels on the top edge of said sidewalls for turning the compost in each of the channels and advancing the same, the channels being opened at their longitudinally opposite ends, one end being a compost receiving end and the other one being a compost discharge end, a discharge conveyor running transversely to the lengths of the channels for receiving compost ejected from the discharge ends of said channels and carrying it away, a fluid-receiving tank extending adjacent the outlet ends of the plurality of channels and having the condenser sections of said heat pipes extending into the fluid-receiving area of the tank for heat exchange with the fluid contained in the tank.
- 41. The system of claim 1 wherein said vessel comprises a conventional ice skating rink construction that includes a concrete floor with an embedded matrix of refrigerant or coolant containing pipes and an associated fluid circulation system, the biomass material being placed on the concrete floor of the ice rink instead of water or ice being disposed on the surface, said second chamber being formed by the warm side and cold side tanks of the ice rink fluid circulating system that communicate with the in-floor piping, whereby the matrix of pipes embedded in the ice rink floor are rendered operable to function as said evaporator section of said heat pipe and the associated ice rink warm side and cold side tanks of the fluid circulation system are rendered operable to function as the condenser section of said heat pipe.
- 42. The system of claim 1 wherein said vessel comprises first and second concrete composting channels (102 and 104) that are about 220 feet long by about 20 feet wide by about 5 feet high, wherein said second-chamber-defining adjacent structure comprises a covered water storage tank (106) between said composting channels and measuring about 8 feet deep by 12 feet wide, and wherein first and second parallel arrays (116 and 118) of a plurality of said heat pipes are respectively embedded transversely in the floors (120 and 122) of said first and second channels (102 and 104) and operable to transfer heat energy only one way, namely, from the first and second composting biomasses (124 and 126) that are respectively loaded into said first and second channels (102 and 104) to said water storage tank (106), and further including:
an in-floor aeration system comprising first and second arrays of perforated conduits (130 and 132) under said first and second composting channels (102 and 104) capable of positive (FIGS. 1 and 2) or negative (FIGS. 3-5) aeration in each said first and second channels, a full leachate collection system utilizing said in-floor aeration system conduits to collect any excess moisture from the composting biomass material, first and second centrifugal blowers (112 and 114) controlled by timers and temperature feedback that provide the oxygen for composting via said aeration system, a compost turner (110) powered by about a 25 hp electric motor for traveling along each said channel, a transfer carriage to move the said compost turner (110) from an end of one of said channels to the adjacent end of the next and back, and a domed truss roof system (108) approximately 250 feet long by 70 feet wide covering the said concrete composting channels (102, (104) and said transfer carriage.
- 43. A method of recovering heat energy from a quantity of biomass material residing in a composting array while in a bacteria active stage, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) providing a biomass composting system comprising a vessel constructed and arranged to define a first chamber and containing the quantity of the biomass material in an array for undergoing aerobic decomposition to thereby generate heat energy in the biomass material, (b) providing an adjacent structure defining a second chamber containing a fluid to be heated, (c) providing a heat pipe having an evaporator section disposed in operable heat transfer relation to the biomass material in said vessel and having a condenser section in operable heat transfer relation with the fluid in said second chamber to thereby transfer, by change of phase of a fluid internally contained within said heat pipe, heat energy generated by decomposition of the biomass material from the first chamber to the fluid of said second chamber to thereby heat such fluid.
- 44. The method of claim 43 wherein the adjacent structure comprises a building to be heated by such fluid.
- 45. The method of claim 44 wherein said building comprises a greenhouse and wherein said vessel comprises a large concrete pad located adjacent the greenhouse, on which the biomass material is arrayed, said method further comprising the steps of:
(d) taking air from the floor area of said greenhouse and drawing it through a blower or air compressor that forces the air via an outlet duct through a series of manifold distribution ducts buried under the large concrete pad on which the biomass material is placed, the concrete pad being perforated so that outlets of air ducts fed by the manifold ducts penetrate the pad and are oriented to blow air upwardly into the biomass array, oxygenating it as air passes therethrough, and (e) providing an inflated dome covering the concrete pad so that the air going upwardly through the biomass is heated by the biomass and then rises to the top of the inflated dome where the heated air is then taken off by the system pressure differential and forced through a dry biomass filter and is then sucked back into the greenhouse where it is now present as warm air that is heavily carbon dioxide laden, thereby providing a major growth accelerant atmosphere for the plants in the greenhouse.
- 46. The method of claim 43 further comprising the steps of:
(d) providing said vessel in the form of a conventional ice skating rink construction that includes a concrete floor with an embedded matrix of refrigerant or coolant containing pipes and an associated fluid circulation system, (e) placing the quantity of biomass material as the array on the concrete floor of the ice rink instead of water or ice being disposed on the surface, (f) proving said second chamber by utilizing the warm side and cold side tanks of the ice rink fluid circulating system that communicate with the in-floor piping, (g) rendering operable the matrix of pipes embedded in the ice rink floor to function as said evaporator section of said heat pipe, and (h) rendering operable associated ice rink warm side and cold side tanks of the fluid circulation system to function as the condenser section of said heat pipe.
- 47. The method of claim 43 wherein said vessel and said heat pipe evaporator section are constructed and arranged relative to one another to maintain a non-contacting relationship between the biomass material array and the heat pipe evaporator section.
- 48. The method of claim 43 wherein heat transfer in step (c) is regulated by maintaining a given value of temperature difference between the decomposing biomass material and the fluid in the second chamber such that the rate of heat energy withdrawal from the biomass array via the heat pipe generally does not substantially exceed the rate of heat energy generation by the biomass material array necessary to sustain the requirements of the bacteria in the biomass array for growth and sustainability.
- 49. The method of claim 48 wherein the fluid in the second chamber is initially pre-heated at start-up of system operation to establish said given value of temperature difference.
- 50. The method of claim 43 comprising the further step of providing the quantity of biomass material by selecting the biomass feedstock to have a relatively high nitrogen content and chopping and blending the feedstock by mixing to form a homogeneous mix.
- 51. The method of claim 50 wherein the recipe of the selected feedstock comprises approximately 30% by weight of fresh green vegetation, approximately 30% by weight of silage materials or fodder and approximately 40% by weight of animal manure.
Parent Case Info
[0001] This is a United States regular utility patent application filed pursuant to 35 U.S.C. §111(a) and claiming the benefit under the provisions of 35 U.S.C. §119(e)(1) of co-pending U.S. provisional utility patent applications Serial No. 60/304,949 filed Jul. 12, 2001; Serial No. 60/337,896 filed Nov. 5, 2001 and Serial No. 60/379,915 filed May 13, 2002, all of the aforesaid U.S. provisional patent applications being incorporated by reference in toto herein.
Provisional Applications (3)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60304949 |
Jul 2001 |
US |
|
60337896 |
Nov 2001 |
US |
|
60379915 |
May 2002 |
US |