HMEL:You are right with your understanding about Stefan's law about the heat transmitted by radiation: t
hot (4th) - t
cold (4th power): in KELVIN. - remember the t
cold is BOILER Temp. = 200C at 100psi... - so radiant heat transmitted is related to 1173K (4th power) - 473K (4th power)
Industrial suppliers of ceramic burners always set a limit around 900deg.C. for ceramics, because the mineral degrades with temperature and time, and when it gets "white hot" it cracks and blows back (failure within just a few minutes), but at a bright yellow-white it burns the "hottest tips" on the cones and they turn to powder within minutes. Also at a bright red, if there is too much air (lean burn) the conducted heat through the ceramic (12mm thick at each 0,5mm hole) heats through the ceramic thickness to the inner surface until it reaches ignition temperature of the gas-air inside the plenum, at which point it spontaneously ignites (flash-back) and burns back to the gas jet. This then produces huge amounts of TOXIC CO gas. And it can melt the burner and cause a fire as red-hot parts that should be cold, ignite adjacent materials.
However at "Red-to Orange", (~900deg.c. or 1173K) they last for many years. Fine mixture control, by adjusting the air at the required gas flow, can produce a burn where the small cones of combustion rise from the individual holes to just above the ceramic cones on the surface, when the cones do not get yellow hot at the tip, and will last a very long time.
e.g. this burner has lasted since the mid-1990s. used for about 5~10 hours per year for 15~20 years at shows, plus "other" time at home. FULL combustion in the boiler within ~1/in. of the burner holes. Tops of cones have "burnt and eroded" with time and usage. Fire door is normally closed in operation (opened here so I can see inside with the camera!)
But care must be taken to avoid "hot-spots". e.g.
N.B. I use a camera, and photograph without other light or flash in order for the camera to show the bright-patches and banding that is invisible to the naked eye.
The Orange is good, the brighter spots were NOT good, but the burner in a boiler had some back pressure which reduced the air-intake a small amount so the bright spots became more orange (not noticeable when viewed down the flue of the boiler using a mirror...). You can also see another factor about radiant ceramic burners, in that the 25% of "square black holes" are "lost surface area" when considering the area of actual radiant versus occupancy of the radiant.
When the mixture is too rich, this happens, which is not complete combustion - the free dark blue cone is CO combustion in secondary air (open space). a correctly designed radiant style boiler-burner will take all the air via the burner, and have no secondary air, but also have no "surplus cone" of burning CO - which is only visible in the dark, using a camera. Inside a boiler, with no secondary air, all the "blue cone CO" will pass through unburnt. - wasted fuel and poisonous CO. This one set-off the CO alarm.
These photos were taken during "tuning" of the burner, and using various gas jets and pressures, as well as tuning the baffles in the sub-ceramic plenum.
There are difficulties of making the gas-air column (at high velocity and lower pressure) slow down to change the high velocity into low velocity and higher pressure in the plenum, and obtain a near uniform gas-air mix and pressure beneath the ceramic... as shown by the colour banding of the bright spots on the burner in the second photo. This is at regions where there is too much gas-air beneath the ceramic, and also how the column of gas-air is forming a standing wave beneath the ceramic.... (the spot and curved line of brightness) Gas-"
dymanics" are simply crazy!
Guys who do not make good burners produce these things, (e.g. long burner photo) where the burner is actually drawing-in air at the low pressure (high velocity) zone where there is no combustion... or are simply over fuelled and poorly mix the gas and air so the mixture changes along the length of the burner. e.g. as in this one from e&@y where the flame height varies with length, and combustion goes from "Almost OK to NO GOOD" (yellow flames) along the length. Things like this should be banned from the Sales websites, as simply dangerous (from CO production) in a boiler.
This photo was on the sales blurb for the burner being sold on the internet. Another photo of one of his burners had no flames for the first 2 or 3 rows of holes... where it was drawing-IN more air...
Disclaimer: I have deliberately shown some burners that are not safe, so you can see what you MUST avoid when making your own burners. ALWAYS operate "burning fuel" Boilers etc. in the OPEN AIR, NOT a garage with an open door, etc., and well away from any other combustible material. Correct use of gas appliances must be followed at all times. USE a CO detector mounted above and near the exhaust flue. (CO is invisible and toxic. It causes permanent lung and brain damage - or worse). (Here-endeth the lesson!).
Enjoy!
K2