
Making Charcoal from Hardwood — Pyrolysis in a Pit Kiln
Instruções
Understand pyrolysis
Understand pyrolysis
Pyrolysis is the thermal decomposition of organic material in the absence of oxygen. When wood is heated above 280°C without air, volatile compounds (water, tar, acetic acid, methanol) boil off, leaving behind nearly pure carbon — charcoal. Charcoal retains the cellular structure of wood but weighs only 20-25% of the original.
Select the right wood
Select the right wood
Hardwoods make the best charcoal: oak, beech, maple, birch, hickory. They produce dense, long-burning charcoal. Softwoods (pine, spruce) produce lighter charcoal that burns fast and is more friable. The wood should be seasoned (air-dried 6+ months) — green wood wastes energy evaporating water.
Materiais para este passo:
Seasoned Hardwood Logs100 kilogramCut wood to uniform size
Cut wood to uniform size
Split logs into pieces of similar diameter (8-12 cm) and length (50-70 cm). Uniform pieces carbonize at the same rate. Pieces that are too thick will have an uncharred wood core. Pieces too thin will turn to ash. Remove bark if possible — it produces excess smoke and ash.
Ferramentas necessárias:
Splitting Axe
SawDig the pit
Dig the pit
Dig a pit 1 meter deep, 1.5 meters wide, and 2 meters long. The soil should be clay or loam — sandy soil lets in too much air. Save the excavated soil in a pile beside the pit — you will use it to seal the kiln. Choose a site away from trees (roots catch fire underground).
Ferramentas necessárias:
Digging ShovelStack the wood in the pit
Stack the wood in the pit
Place a kindling layer at the bottom of the pit. Stack the split wood tightly in the pit — upright or at a 45° angle. Pack pieces as closely as possible to minimize air gaps. The tighter the stack, the less wood burns to ash and the more converts to charcoal. Fill to about 30 cm above ground level (it will settle).
Light the top layer
Light the top layer
Light the kindling and small wood at the top of the stack. Let it burn freely for 30-60 minutes until a good bed of coals forms across the entire surface. The fire burns downward through the stack. This top-down lighting ensures the volatile gases from lower wood pass through the hot upper zone and combust.
Ferramentas necessárias:
Fire Starter or MatchesCover with green branches
Cover with green branches
Once the top is burning well, lay fresh green branches or wet straw across the pit as a separator layer. This prevents the soil cover from falling into the fire and smothering it. The green material will char in place and become part of the seal.
Materiais para este passo:
Green Branches or Wet Straw1 feixeSeal with soil
Seal with soil
Shovel the excavated soil over the green branches to form a layer 10-15 cm thick. This seal cuts off most of the air supply, stopping combustion and allowing pyrolysis to take over. Leave 2-3 small vent holes (5 cm diameter) around the edges for controlled airflow.
Ferramentas necessárias:
Digging ShovelMonitor the smoke color
Monitor the smoke color
Watch the smoke from the vent holes. The color tells you the stage: thick white smoke = water evaporating (first 4-6 hours), yellow/brown smoke = tars and volatiles being driven off (6-18 hours), thin blue/transparent smoke = carbonization nearly complete (18-36 hours). This is the most important indicator.
Adjust the vents
Adjust the vents
If smoke pours from one side heavily, close that vent and open one on the opposite side to redirect heat. If flame breaks through the soil seal, add more soil immediately — flames mean air is getting in and burning your charcoal to ash. The goal is slow, even carbonization.
Seal completely when done
Seal completely when done
When smoke becomes thin and nearly colorless (after 24-48 hours depending on wood type and pit size), seal ALL vent holes with soil. Pack firmly. This stops all airflow and lets the charcoal cool without burning further. Do not open the pit prematurely — oxygen rush will ignite the charcoal.
Let the pit cool for 24-48 hours
Let the pit cool for 24-48 hours
The sealed pit must cool completely before opening — at least 24 hours, preferably 48. Test by placing your hand on the soil: if any warmth is felt, wait longer. Opening a hot pit introduces oxygen that will ignite the charcoal, burning your entire yield to ash.
Open and extract the charcoal
Open and extract the charcoal
Carefully remove the soil cover with a shovel. The charcoal should be black, lightweight, and ring when pieces are tapped together (a metallic 'clink'). It should NOT be brown (underburned) or grey-white (overburned to ash). Expect about 20-25% yield by weight: 100 kg of wood produces 20-25 kg of charcoal.
Ferramentas necessárias:
Digging ShovelSort and grade the charcoal
Sort and grade the charcoal
Separate into three grades: large pieces (8+ cm, for forge work and smelting), medium pieces (3-8 cm, general purpose), and fines/dust (for soil amendment, water filtration, or re-use as fuel bed). Discard any partially burned wood — it still contains volatiles and will smoke when burned.
Store the charcoal
Store the charcoal
Store charcoal in a dry, covered location in breathable bags (burlap or paper). Charcoal is hygroscopic — it absorbs moisture from the air, reducing burn efficiency. Keep off the ground on pallets. Well-stored charcoal lasts indefinitely — archaeologists have found usable charcoal thousands of years old.
Materiais para este passo:
Burlap Storage Sack5 peçasMateriais
3- 100 kilogramReferência
- 1 feixeReferência
- 5 peçasReferência
Ferramentas necessárias
4- Referência
- Referência
- Referência
CC0 Domínio Público
Este blueprint é liberado sob CC0. Você é livre para copiar, modificar, distribuir e usar este trabalho para qualquer finalidade, sem pedir permissão.
Apoie o Maker comprando produtos através do Blueprint, onde ele ganha uma Comissão Maker definida pelos vendedores, ou crie uma nova versão deste Blueprint e inclua-o como conexão no seu próprio Blueprint para compartilhar receita.