| Home > Agriculture > Charcoal |
| This page highlights pre-qualified Charcoal Products
manufacturers , exporters and suppliers with a factory located in
China and around the world. The most common variety of charcoal, wood charcoal, was formerly prepared by piling wood into stacks, covering it with earth or turf, and setting it on fire. In this process volatile compounds in the wood pass off as vapors into the air, some of the carbon is consumed as fuel, and the rest of the carbon is converted into charcoal. In the modern method, wood is raised to a high temperature in an iron retort, and industrially important
by products, e.g., methanol , acetone, pyroligneous acid, and acetic acid, are saved by condensing them to their liquid
form.
One of the most important applications of wood charcoal is as a constituent of gunpowder. It is also used in metallurgical operations as a reducing agent, but its application has been diminished by the introduction of coke, anthracite smalls, etc. A limited quantity is made up into the form of drawing crayons; but the greatest amount is used as a fuel, which burns hotter and cleaner than wood. Charcoal is often used by blacksmiths, for cooking, and for other industrial applications. Charcoal is used in art for drawing, making rough sketches in painting, and is one of the possible media for making a parsemage. Bamboo charcoal is the principal tool. The charcoal practices aimed to aquaint beginning students with a relatively quick drawing medium, give them single applications to learn how best to employ charcoal sticks, vine charcoal, blending tools, and kneaded erasers to achieve at least 4 different values for each practice drawing. Their own applications would follow. |
|
We produced coconut shell-based charcoal compressed under extremely high pressure to form a very dense product with burning characteristics perfectly suitable for indoor usage as well as outdoor activity. It gives a much higher radiant heat output compare to normal wood charcoal, and being dense, it does not spark or split when burning. Burns down to 0.2% ash.
|
| Charcoal |