These calculations should settle whether or not the amount of CO2 from a candle is useful for growing. It uses no more than high school chemistry and maths:
My grow cupboard is 0.5m x 0.45m x 1.5m = 0.337m^3 = 337 litre
Formula for candle-wax (typical) is C25H52
Atomic Mass: Oxygen 16g, Hydrogen 1g, Carbon 12g per mole
Molecular Mass: CO2 44g per mole
Equation for burning wax in air: C25H52 + 38O2 -> 25CO2 + 26H20
Volume of 1 mole gas 22.4 litre
Ambient CO2 level 300part per million (ppm)
Ideal CO2 level for growing 1500ppm
amount of CO2 to add to air for ideal growing: 1200ppm
Mass of 1 tealight candle 10g (my estimate)
duration of burn 4 hours (as printed on side of packet)
rate that wax burns: 2.5g/hour
cost of candle 11cent
Assume: all wax is fully burnt to CO2 and water
Wax contains C(25 x 12g) / (C(25 x 12g) + H(52 x 1g)) x 100 = 85% carbon
Therefore when 2.5g wax is burnt, 85% x 2.5g /12g(atomic weight C) = 0.177 mole C is burnt
to produce 0.177 mole of CO2
Volume of 0.177 mole CO2 is 0.177 x 22.4 litre = 3.96 litre CO2
which raises the following volume of air up by 1200ppm: 3.96 x 1000000 / 1200 = 3300 litre
3300/337(Volume of cupboard) gives 9.8 full air changes at 1500ppm per hour, for burning 1 candle. I think thats quite a good rate, but if I need more airflow then the CO2 level will just go down a bit towards but always above ambient.
I hope that clarifies that part (I also hope I didn't do any maths blunders - I am rusty)
Now to the other bit, assuming that I (or any other intrepid builder) can construct a growroom without burning their housesdown, would the candles pose any other problems I may have missed, and has anyone tried this yet to see if it works? I'm trying to connect with any DIY tinkerers who may have experimented with CO2 assisted growing. I can't believe that I'd be the first to try, surely someone has had a go and feels like reporting back - even if to say it didnt do much for the bother?
In terms of excess heat being generated, Hemp_Goddess and others: I plan to use 2 x 55w cfl, and the Red/Blue UFO 660nm growlamp (90w) that just arrived today.
I ran all of the lights for a couple of hours and the temp sat nicely in the high 20s (Celcius) before I've even built the extractor. So assuming that I'm using enough light to grow a few small plants, there won't be a heat problem for me (its cold in the room the grow cupboard is in, its winter now (southern hemisphere)).
My present downer is that the old unknown seeds I've scored have been sitting on damp rockwool for a week now showing no interest in germinating but thats another story
BTW I make no claim at all to being an expert. This will be my very first indoor grow, I'll have heaps of questons to ask, will often be in need of help
and am really pleased to have found this forum
Cheers