Meet the teams: Backed by the EPA and DOE, top cookstove designers tackle the heatstove
This post is the sixth in a series introducing the 12 teams participating in the 2018 Wood Stove Design Challenge in November.
By John Ackerly, Ken Adler, and Shoshana Rybeck, Alliance for Green Heat
By John Ackerly, Ken Adler, and Shoshana Rybeck, Alliance for Green Heat
Cook stoves and international development
Dean Still (left) with participants at an Ethos conference near Seattle. |
The New Yorker magazine featured Dean in a 2009 article about engineers who need to design stoves that cost no more than $10 so even the world’s poorest people can afford them. So, when we told Dean that cheap stoves by our standards were between $500 and $1,000, he laughed and said, “you would think that should be easy.”
ASAT won a $300,000 grant from the EPA to build a heat stove that makes electricity, thirty times more than the $10,000 that each team is getting from DOE through the Alliance for Green Heat. ASAT has another advantage that only a few teams have in the competition: they operate a testing lab so they can measure changes in emissions and efficiency with each iteration of the prototype.
ASAT's sister group, Aprovecho hosts annual "stove camps" where innovators work together to built and test designs |
ASAT’s strategy
Dean Still with Prince Charles, who has been an advocate for the modern, cleaner cookstoves |
ASAT is using an expansive strategy and are integrating many innovative technologies, from fabric filters to laser smoke sensors that automatically adjust secondary air. By keeping an open mind, the ASAT team is winnowing down technologies, but the danger is that they are doing this on a very short time-line and the prototype is still going through major changes with less than 6 months prior to the competition.
ASAT's lab in Cottage Grove, OR |
Thermoelectric technology
With help from the EPA, ASAT is developing a stove that can be used to cook food, heat the home and create electricity mainly for rural households in Asia that have intermittent or no electricity. To do this, electronic designer and manufacturer Karl Walter and lab manager Sam Bentson have created a new type of TEG that fits into the evolving design. The team is currently working on the fifth iteration and are focusing on how to create reliable electricity in the most inexpensive way possible.
Sam Bentson, ASAT Lab Manager |
Creating an affordable cook stove with an attached TEG that does not have “moving parts” is no easy task. Thankfully, with the financial support of the DOE and EPA, ASAT has been able to fully delve into this project and work through the challenges they have faced. Karl says that for their team the largest challenges had to do with temperature differentials and power outputs. He says that finding a “realistic power output was difficult” as well as figuring out “what happens when you overheat the stove.” But, the team is on a two year contract for their EPA project and with a year remaining, they are optimistic about the future development of their product and plan to have a model prototype ready for market testing within the next 4 months.
ASAT follows the old adage to think globally and act locally. Their efforts to create stoves that benefit people around the world have had tremendous support from national and regional organizations and they hope to expose the powerful technology they’ve been working on to a larger audience at the challenge in November.
Contact the team at:
Meet the teams: Backed by the EPA and DOE, top cookstove designers tackle the heatstove
Reviewed by Mr X
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June 28, 2018
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