Quotation from: General Science

Written by: Bertha M. Clark


53. How Charcoal is Made. Charcoal may be made by heating wood in an
oven to which air does not have free access. The absence of air
prevents ordinary combustion, nevertheless the intense heat affects
the wood and changes it into new substances, one of which is charcoal.


The wood which smolders on the hearth and in the stove is charcoal in
the making. Formerly wood was piled in heaps, covered with sod or sand
to prevent access of oxygen, and then was set fire to; the smoldering
wood, cut off from an adequate supply of air, was slowly transformed
into charcoal. Scattered over the country one still finds isolated
charcoal kilns, crude earthen receptacles, in which wood thus deprived
of air was allowed to smolder and form charcoal. To-day charcoal is
made commercially by piling wood on steel cars and then pushing the
cars into strong walled chambers. The chambers are closed to prevent
access of air, and heated to a high temperature. The intense heat
transforms the wood into charcoal in a few hours. A student can make
in the laboratory sufficient charcoal for art lessons by heating in an
earthen vessel wood buried in sand. The process will be slow, however,
because the heat furnished by a Bunsen burner is not great, and the
wood is transformed slowly.

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