Charcoal Briquettes from Agricultural Waste

Charcoal Briquettes from Agricultural Waste

 

Charcoal briquettes is powdered or crushed charcoal mashed and molded using binder which

can either be cassava, corn or camote powder. As fuel, charcoal briquettes gives more heat

than ordinary charcoal or wood. It is almost smoked-free and heat is consistent. The fire lasts

longer than ordinary charcoal and can be easily stored or transported because it is lighter in

weight.

 

The briquettes which are hard can be used in industrial ovens instead of using carbon in

melting the metal from iron ore or stone.

 

Charcoal briquettes can be made from rice hull, coconut barks, twigs or shells or husk and

powder from husk and wooden saw dust, wood trimmings, twigs, branches and the like.

Aside from fuel, the briquettes can be used in different industries such as in making carbon

disulfide, carbon electrodes, carbon tetrachloride, carbon carbide, sodium cyanide and

activated charcoal. Activated carbon is used in filtering air or water.

 

Materials Needed, Tools Needed

 

Smoke free charcoal Hammer

Cassava, corn or Pail

camote starch Molds

Jar or drier

 

Procedure:

The briquettes can be made manually or by machine. The method is easy specially in places

where coconut is abundant.

 

Procedure (briquettes made manually)

 

1. Prepare a smoke free charcoal – can be determined when it is shiny and has metal-like sounds when it falls.

2. Crush the charcoal by the use of a hammer.

3. Cook the cassava powder (or camote or corn) in a moderate heat. The starch that will be released must be syrupy but not thick. This will serve as binder.

4. Mix well the powdered charcoal and the binder in a pail or container.

5. Knead this as in bread-making.

6. Place in corresponding molds.

7. Let it dry under the sun. Oven drying is preferable.

 

SOURCE:TEKNO-TULONG

2 thoughts on “Charcoal Briquettes from Agricultural Waste”

  1. where is your location>???can we visit you,,to know the process and see how to make briquette charcoal? we are from PUP bataan ,,

  2. i am thinking of a possibility if most organic farm waste, rice stalks, leaves or even grasses can be combined with grounded wood to form the basic ingredient of charcoal. where can I visit you ?

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