Coal Fire chain grate boiler flue side chemical cleaning is proposed to remove sticky material, which chemical can be used and how?

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Coal Fire chain grate boiler flue side chemical cleaning is proposed to remove sticky material, which chemical can be used and how?

3 Comments

  1. I need to know more:  is it coke, wood resin, a mixture of both, how thick, is it crusty or wet to touch, what has been burning in that flue?

  2. There are 2 benefits from burning coal. 1. because it is a hydrocarbon molecule it can be (cleaned) consumed by an RNA microbe called Archaea.  When the job is finished there is no residue and no waste chemicals to dispose of.  2. the coal that is burnt and disposed of in some sort of holding tank is actually one of the most nutrient dense fertilizers in the world.  > Oil comes from dead animals. Coal comes from dead plants. The earth plants were all ocean plants, died, compacted, became part of plate tectonic movements, became land, mountains etc. So when they mine for coal they are digging into the past earth life which was very prolific.   Soil next to an ancient volcano is also very rich in nutrients.  Sell "fly ash" make a profit from a waste.  Use it to grow crops and make an even greater profit and have food storage security.  For more scientific info email me at biozomesales@biozome.com.

    1 Comment reply

    1. Guy

      I am interested to know how long you think it would take for the Archaea to remove tar residues from the flue? How do you suggest that Muhammad applies the Archaea to the inner surface of the flue and keeps them alive? Do you think this is a practical solution? 

      I am intrigued by your comments promoting use of fly ash in agriculture. Is any pretreatment appropriate to remove the elevated concentrations of boron, mercury, arsenic and other phytotoxins? If fly ash is so beneficial to farms, why is it that around 120 million tonnes per year (ie 99.8% of the total generated by the USA) is dumped in landfills, used in construction or other non-agricultural uses?