Here are some new pictures:
My friend tells that so far it seems that a two step process might work better where in the first one we get the "soup" and on the second step we separate it into needed fractions. For the second step the following setup was used. The reactor and heater stayed the same, a new hole in the lid was made so that the "soup" could be poured in at controllable flow rate. The reactor was heated up to work temperature and a thin stream of "soup" was allowed to pour in the hot reactor. The result is instant flash boiling and turning to vapor. As long as the heat is maintained, this can be done continuously. The vapors then pass through three condensers stacked on top one another. The first one (the bottom one) is heavily insulated and has an outlet valve, the second one is left as is, and the last one is water cooled. They all have outlet valves. This was the first attempt without additional heating of the condensers, completely passive. Most of the liquid came out of the bottom condenser and was considerably more clear than the soup itself. Some of the liquid came of the second condenser and almost nothing cam from the water cooled condenser. We are waiting for a centrifugal filter to make the fuels clear and then we will send them for chemical analysis to see what exactly we get from such a setup.
Thanks,
Jetijs
My friend tells that so far it seems that a two step process might work better where in the first one we get the "soup" and on the second step we separate it into needed fractions. For the second step the following setup was used. The reactor and heater stayed the same, a new hole in the lid was made so that the "soup" could be poured in at controllable flow rate. The reactor was heated up to work temperature and a thin stream of "soup" was allowed to pour in the hot reactor. The result is instant flash boiling and turning to vapor. As long as the heat is maintained, this can be done continuously. The vapors then pass through three condensers stacked on top one another. The first one (the bottom one) is heavily insulated and has an outlet valve, the second one is left as is, and the last one is water cooled. They all have outlet valves. This was the first attempt without additional heating of the condensers, completely passive. Most of the liquid came out of the bottom condenser and was considerably more clear than the soup itself. Some of the liquid came of the second condenser and almost nothing cam from the water cooled condenser. We are waiting for a centrifugal filter to make the fuels clear and then we will send them for chemical analysis to see what exactly we get from such a setup.
Thanks,
Jetijs
Comment