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1.
In this study, methane and model biogas were added during the catalytic steam gasification of pine to regulate the syngas composition and improve the quality of syngas. The effects of Ni/γ-Al2O3 catalyst, steam and methane/model biogas on H2/CO ratio, syngas yield, carbon conversion rate and tar yield were explored. The results indicated that the addition of methane/model biogas during biomass steam gasification could increase the H2/CO ratio to about 2. Methane/model biogas, steam and Ni/γ-Al2O3 catalyst significantly affected the quality of syngas. High H2 content syngas with H2/CO ratio of about 2, biomass carbon conversion >85% and low tar yield was achieved under the optimum condition: S/C = 1.5, α = 0.2 and using Ni/γ-Al2O3 catalyst. According to ANOVA, methane and catalyst were the key influencing factors of the H2/CO ratio and syngas yield, and the tar yield mainly depended on the Ni/γ-Al2O3 catalyst. Biogas, as a more environmentally friendly material than methane, can also regulate the composition of syngas co-feeding with biomass.  相似文献   

2.
In order to improve hydrogen production and reduce tar generation during the biomass gasification, a catalyst loaded Fe‐Ce using calcined olivine as the support (Fe‐Ce/olivine catalysts) was prepared through deposition‐precipitation method. The characteristics of catalysts were determined by XRF, BET, XRD, and FTIR. Syngas yield, hydrogen yield, and tar yield were used to evaluate the catalyst activity. Meanwhile, the stability of catalysts was also studied. The results showed that the specific surface area and pore volume of olivine after calcined at high temperature were improved which was beneficial for the load of metals. α‐Fe2O3 and CeO2 were the main active component of Fe‐Ce/olivine catalyst. The Fe‐Ce/olivine catalyst displayed a good performance on the catalytic gasification of pine sawdust with a syngas yield of 0.93 Nm3/kg, H2 yield of 21.37 mol/kg, and carbon conversion rate of 55.14% at a catalytic temperature and gasification temperature of 800°C. Meanwhile, the Fe‐Ce/olivine catalyst could maintain a good stability after 150 minutes used.  相似文献   

3.
A fluidized bed gasification system was built to investigate the biomass steam gasification performance in different conditions. Medium heating value syngas with 34% H2 content and no more than 20 g/Nm3 tar content could be obtained under 800°C with a S/B (steam vs. biomass ratio) of 0.9 by using olivine as bed material. The results indicated that syngas quality (including H2 content, gasification efficiency, tar reduction, etc.) is in a positive correlation with temperature and S/B, but has a negative correlation with fluidization number (FN). Compared with quartz sand and dolomite, olivine is more suitable for fluidized bed because of its catalytic ability and good abrasion performance for fluidized bed gasifier. As a result, a set of optimum parameters is recommended with S/B of 0.9~1.0, FN of 1.4, and temperature of 800°C in this study.

Tar is a by-product from the gasification process, which will cause the pipeline congestion, reduce the gasification efficiency, and deteriorate the working condition. According to this experiment, the temperature and S/B both have a negative effect on tar content, while tar content increased with increase in the FN. Dolomite and olivine both have an inhibition function on tar, and the olivine is considered the best choice of bed material because of its good anti-wear properties.  相似文献   


4.
Biomass tar is one of the most troublesome issues limiting the further development of biomass pyrolysis and gasification. In this study, a plasma enhanced catalytic steam reforming technology was applied for biomass tar removal. Toluene was selected as biomass tar surrogate. The nano-sized alumina-supported nickel and iron catalysts with different molar ratios of M/Al (M: Ni or Fe, 0:1, 1:3, 1:1, 3:1, 1:0) were prepared for catalytic steam reforming of toluene in a non-thermal plasma reactor featuring dielectric barrier discharge (DBD). The results showed that syngas was the dominant gas product of toluene decomposition. The conversion efficiency of toluene and energy efficiency using Ni-Al and Fe-Al catalysts both followed a sequence: M1Al3 > M1Al1 > M3Al1, which is in line with the BET surface area and pore volume. However, the selectivity of H2 and CO catalysed by Ni-Al and Fe-Al catalysts follows the order of M1Al3 < M1Al1 < M3Al1. Presumably, toluene dissociation is a process composed of adsorption-reaction-desorption. The formation of syngas is supposed to proceed as a series of ionic and free radical reactions occurring preferably in the gas phase. Ni1Al3 catalyst shows the largest potential in converting biomass tar into H2-rich syngas, with a maximum toluene conversion of 96% and a largest H2 yield of 2.18 mol/mol-toluene. Besides, the results showed that this hybrid plasma-catalysis system was potential in anti-carbon deposition.  相似文献   

5.
Syngas production from biomass gasification is a potentially sustainable and alternative means of conventional fuels. The current challenges for biomass gasification process are biomass storage and tar contamination in syngas. Co-gasification of two biomass and use of mineral catalysts as tar reformer in downdraft gasifier is addressed the issues. The optimized and parametric study of key parameters such as temperature, biomass blending ratio, and catalyst loading were made using Response Surface Methodology (RSM) and Artificial Neural Network (ANN) on tar reduction and syngas. The maximum H2 was produced when Portland cement used as catalyst at optimum conditions, temperature of 900 °C, catalyst-loading of 30%, and biomass blending-ratio of W52:OPF48. Higher CO was yielded from dolomite catalyst and lowest tar content obtained from limestone catalyst. Both RSM and ANN are satisfactory to validate and predict the response for each type of catalytic co-gasification of two biomass for clean syngas production.  相似文献   

6.
To produce the high quality H2-rich syngas from biomass and plastic wastes, a two-stage pyrolysis-gasification system involving pyrolysis and catalytic gasification is considered as a suitable route. Generally, synthesis of highly active, low cost and coke-resistant catalyst for tar cracking is the key factor. A series of monometallic catalysts of Ni@CNF/PCs and Fe@CNF/PCs and the bimetallic Ni–Fe@CNF/PCs catalyst were prepared by a simple one-step pyrolysis approach for high quality syngas production from pyrolysis-gasification of biomass and plastic wastes. The results indicated that the bimetallic Ni–Fe@CNF/PCs catalyst appeared as the optimal catalyst in affording the best compromise between catalytic activity and stability with the existence of the excellent dispersibility of the Fe0.64Ni0.36 alloy nanoparticles and the carbon nanofibers/porous carbon composite structure. In addition, the optimal operation conditions of biomass/plastic ratio of 1/2 and gasification temperature of 700 °C were observed for the bimetallic Ni–Fe@CNF/PCs catalyst to play best roles in the H2-rich syngas quality, with up to 33.66 mmol H2/g biomass, and tar yields as low as 5.66 mg/g.  相似文献   

7.
In order to improve the energy conversion efficiency of hydrogen production from biomass gasification and reduce environmental pollution, it is necessary to study the mechanism of tar catalytic cracking. In present work, in-situ infrared spectroscopy has been used to study the adsorption cracking of toluene on calcined olivine catalyst from room temperature to 500 °C. The experimental results indicate that there is no chemical adsorption of toluene on calcined olivine catalyst from room temperature to 200 °C. When the temperature is higher than about 300 °C, the toluene is chemically adsorbed on α-Fe2O3, which is the surface active site of the calcined olivine catalyst. The chemical adsorption occurs between the benzene ring and Fe3+, and it promotes the breakage of methyl from the benzene ring. With the increasing of reaction temperature, the delocalization large π bond in the benzene ring is destroyed by Fe3+, which makes the benzene ring easier to break into smaller products or intermediate products.  相似文献   

8.
Ni/red mud (RM) catalysts were prepared by wet impregnation and used in the catalytic steam gasification of bamboo sawdust (BS) to produce hydrogen-rich syngas. The system was optimized in terms of the amount of added nickel (10%), reaction temperature (800 °C), and catalyst placement (separately behind the BS). The maximum H2 yield was 17.3% higher than that using pure RM catalyst and 43.8% higher than that of BS gasification alone, and the H2/CO ratio in the syngas reached 7.82. This Ni/RM catalyst also retained good activity after six cycles in a double-stage fixed bed reactor. Analysis using X-ray fluorescence, X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive spectroscopy, and other methods revealed that the interaction of Ni, Fe, and Mg in Ni/RM produced bimetallic compounds containing active sites, such as NiFe2O4, MgNiO2, and NiO. This explains the good catalytic performance in the tar conversion during the gasification process.  相似文献   

9.
Tar is a common by-product during the gasification of biomass and its presence largely limits the subsequent application of syngas generated. Although biomass tar could be converted into hydrogen-rich syngas by catalytic steam reforming, the frequently adopted high-activity and low-cost Ni catalysts suffer from the problem of easy deactivation as a result of carbon deposition, and more efficient and stable catalyst needs to be developed for tar removal in biomass gasification. In the work, various Ni/pyrochlore catalysts characterized with redox properties were constructed and further modified through partial replacement of A-site in support, and their reaction characteristics in toluene steam reforming were comprehensively investigated. Results show that catalysts of Ni/La2Ce2 and Ni/Y2Ce2 have good catalytic performance due to the strong interaction between Ni and pyrochlore. Although a small amount doping of Sr in A-site is observed to decrease Ni/pyrochlore interaction, the great promotion in surface oxygen mobility make Ni/La1.8Sr0.2Ce2 possess the best reactivity among all catalysts studied, and the optimum operating conditions is determined to be 650 °C and S/C = 2. Moreover, Ni/La1.8Sr0.2Ce2 is found to be very stable during toluene steam reforming, which is proved to be a result of the superior capability in resisting coke formation.  相似文献   

10.
High-performance and inexpensive catalysts play a large role in effective removal of biomass tar produced during biomass gasification. In this study, raw wood, with long, through, but distorted channels and a low tortuosity, was selected as a support. A layered NiCe-metal organic framework (NiCe-MOF) was grown in-situ on the surface of raw wood microchannels by using abundant surface hydroxide groups. Then, this catalyst was carbonized at 600 °C in a N2 atmosphere to obtain NiCe-MOF derived catalyst/wood carbon (NiCe-MDC/WC), which was selected as a structured reactor for the steam reforming of biomass tar. NiCe-MDC/WC achieved an excellent conversion rate of approximately 99% for toluene and a high catalytic stability of 48 h at low temperature of 550 °C. Moreover, NiCe-MDC/WC showed higher catalytic performance than Ni-MDC/WC (~79%), crushed-NiCe-MDC/WC (~94%), and Ni/WC (~75%) in stability tests. These excellent results were assumed to be derived from the multilevel structure obtained from wood carbon microchannels and secondary layered MOF channels, appropriate metal-support interactions, and the presence of Ce, which could improve the dispersion of active sites and mass transfer efficiency and inhibit coke formation. Thus, such Ni-based MOF-derived structured reactors are promising for tar conversion and useful syngas production.  相似文献   

11.
The reforming of hot gas generated from biomass gasification and high temperature gas filtration was studied in order to reach the goal of the CHRISGAS project: a 60% of synthesis gas (as x(H2)+ x(CO) on a N2 and dry basis) in the exit gas, which can be converted either into H2 or fuels. A Ni-MgAl2O4 commercial-like catalyst was tested downstream the gasification of clean wood made of saw dust, waste wood and miscanthus as herbaceous biomass. The effect of the temperature and contact time on the hydrocarbon conversion as well as the characterization of the used catalysts was studied. Low (<600 °C), medium (750°C–900 °C) and high temperature (900°C–1050 °C) tests were carried out in order to study, respectively, the tar cracking, the lowest operating reformer temperature for clean biomass, the methane conversion achievable as function of the temperature and the catalyst deactivation. The results demonstrate the possibility to produce an enriched syngas by the upgrading of the gasification stream of woody biomass with low sulphur content. However, for miscanthusthe development of catalysts with an enhanced resistance to sulphur poison will be the key point in the process development.  相似文献   

12.
Tars in biomass gasification systems need to be removed to avoid damaging and clogging downstream pipes or equipment. In this study, Ni-based catalysts were made by mechanically mixing NiO and char particles at various ratios. Catalytic performance of the Ni/char catalysts was studied and compared with performance of wood char and coal char without Ni for syngas cleanup in a laboratory-scale updraft biomass gasifier. Reforming parameters investigated were reaction temperature (650–850 °C), NiO loading (5–20% of the weight of char support), and gas residence time (0.1–1.2 s). The Ni/coalchar and Ni/woodchar catalysts removed more than 97% of tars in syngas at 800 °C reforming temperature, 15% NiO loading, and 0.3 s gas residence time. Analysis of syngas composition indicated that concentrations of H2 and CO in syngas significantly. Furthermore, performance of the Ni/coalchar catalyst was continuously tested for 8 h. There was slight deactivation of the catalyst in the early stage of tar/syngas reforming; however, the catalyst was able to stabilize soon after. It was concluded that chars especially coal char can be an effective and inexpensive support of NiO for biomass gasification tar removal and syngas conditioning.  相似文献   

13.
《能源学会志》2020,93(3):1074-1082
A dual loop gasification system (DLG) has been previously proposed to facilitate tar destruction and H2-rich gas production in steam gasification of biomass. To sustain the process auto-thermal, however, additional fuel with higher carbon content has to be supplied. Co-gasification of biomass in conjunction with coal is a preferred option. Herein, the heat balance of the steam co-gasification of pine sawdust and Shenmu bituminous coal in the DLG has been analyzed to verify the feasibility of the process with the help of Aspen Plus. Upon which, the co-gasification experiments in the DLG have been investigated with olivine as both solid heat carriers and in-situ tar destruction catalysts. The simulation results show that the self-heating of the DLG in the co-gasification is achieved at the coal blending ratio of 28%, gasification circulation ratio of 19 and reforming circulation ratio of 20 when the gasifier temperature 800 °C, reforming temperature 850 °C, combustor temperature 920 °C and S/C 1.1. The co-gasification experiments indicate that the tar is efficiently destructed in the DLG at the optimized reformer temperature and with olivine catalysts.  相似文献   

14.
Tars should be removed from biomass gasification systems so as not to damage or clog downstream pipes or equipment. In this paper, lignite insoluble residue (LIR) after extraction of humic acids was used as the support to prepare a nickel-loaded LIR (Ni/LIR) catalyst. This novel catalyst Ni/LIR was tested in steam reforming of toluene as a model compound of biomass tar conducted in a laboratory-scale fixed bed reactor. When compared to the reactions without catalyst or with Ni/Al2O3, Ni/LIR was confirmed as an active catalyst for toluene conversion at a relatively low temperature of 900 K. The investigated reforming parameters during the experiments in this research were selected as reaction temperature at a range of 850–950 K, steam/carbon molar ratio at a range of 2–5 mol/mol, and a space velocity from 1696 to 3387 h?1. It was concluded that, under optimum conditions, significant amount of syngas yields, acceptable Ni/LIR consumption and more than 95% of toluene conversion can be obtained from the biomass Ni/LIR catalytic gasification system.  相似文献   

15.
This study investigates the enhancement of tar and trace gaseous pollutants (e.g. hydrogen sulfide (H2S) and hydrogen chloride (HCl) removal efficiency derived from rice straw gasification using an integrated hot-gas cleaning system. A bubbling fluidized bed gasifier was used by controlling the temperature at 800 °C and equivalence ratio (ER) ranging 0.2 to 0.4. The hot gas cleaning system was operated at 250 °C and designed to combine three types of absorbents including zeolite, calcined dolomite, and activated carbon. Tar, H2S, and HCl removal efficiency and enhanced hydrogen production were also discussed. The experimental results indicated that light fraction tar removal efficiency was higher than 90% and the overall tar removal efficiency was approximately 70%. In the case of ER 0.4, the syngas tar content was decreased from 71.88 g/Nm3 (without hot gas cleaning system) to 16.53 g/Nm3 (with hot gas cleaning system). The tar removal efficiency is nearly 77% using the hot gas cleaning system. The HCl and H2S removal efficiency ranged from 94% to 98% and from 80.7% to 83.92%, respectively. In the case of ER 0.3 and with the hot gas cleaning system, the HCl and H2S concentrations in cleaned syngas gas were less than 40 ppm and 100 ppm, respectively. Meanwhile, the hydrogen concentration of produced gas was also increased from 6.82% to 9.83% with hot gas cleaning system used. It means that the hot gas cleaning system can effectively remove HCl and H2S from produced gas in gasification, but also it has good potential for improving syngas quality and enhancing gas turbine application in the future.  相似文献   

16.
This paper investigates the hot gas temperature effect on enhancing hydrogen generation and minimizing tar yield using zeolite and prepared Ni-based catalysts in rice straw gasification. Results obtained from this work have shown that increasing hot gas temperature and applying catalysts can enhance energy yield efficiency. When zeolite catalyst and hot gas temperature were adjusted from 250 °C to 400 °C, H2 and CO increased slightly from 7.31% to 14.57%–8.03% and 17.34%, respectively. The tar removal efficiency varies in the 70%–90% range. When the zeolite was replaced with prepared Ni-based catalysts and hot gas cleaning (HGC) operated at 250 °C, H2 contents were significantly increased from 6.63% to 12.24% resulting in decreasing the hydrocarbon (tar), and methane content. This implied that NiO could promote the water-gas shift reaction and CH4 reforming reaction. Under other conditions in which the hot gas temperature was 400 °C, deactivated effects on prepared Ni-based catalyst were observed for inhibiting syngas and tar reduction in the HGC system. The prepared Ni-based catalyst worked at 250 °C demonstrate higher stability, catalyst activity, and less coke decomposition in dry reforming. In summary, the optimum catalytic performance in syngas production and tar elimination was achieved when the catalytic temperature was 250 °C in the presence of prepared Ni-based catalysts, producing 5.92 MJ/kg of lower heating value (LHV) and 73.9% tar removal efficiency.  相似文献   

17.
In this study, different char based catalysts were evaluated in order to increase hydrogen production from the steam pyrolysis of olive pomace in two stage fixed bed reactor system. Biomass char, nickel loaded biomass char, coal char and nickel or iron loaded coal chars were used as catalyst. Acid washed biomass char was also tested to investigate the effect of inorganics in char on catalytic activity for hydrogen production. Catalysts were characterized by using Brunauer–Emmet–Teller (BET) method, X-ray diffraction (XRD) analyzer, X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and thermogravimetric analyzer (TGA). The results showed that the steam in absence of catalyst had no influence on hydrogen production. Increase in catalytic bed temperature (from 500 °C to 700 °C) enhanced hydrogen production in presence of Ni-impregnated and non-impregnated biomass char. Inherent inorganic content of char had great effect on hydrogen production. Ni based biomass char exhibited the highest catalytic activity in terms of hydrogen production. Besides, Ni and Fe based coal char had catalytic activity on H2 production. On the other hand, the results showed that biomass char was not thermally stable under steam pyrolysis conditions. Weight loss of catalyst during steam pyrolysis could be attributed to steam gasification of biomass char itself. In contrast, properties of coal char based catalysts after steam pyrolysis process remained nearly unchanged, leading to better thermal stability than biomass char.  相似文献   

18.
Biomass gasification is a prevailing approach for mitigating irreversible fossil fuel depletion. In this study, palm empty fruit bunch (EFB) was steam-gasified in a fixed-bed, batch-fed gasifier, and the effect of four control factors—namely torrefaction temperature for EFB pretreatment, gasification temperature, carrier-gas flow rate, and steam flow rate—on syngas production were investigated. The results showed that steam flow rate is the least influential control factor, with no effect on syngas composition or yield. The gasification temperature of biomass significantly affects the composition of syngas generated during steam gasification, and the H2/CO ratio increases by approximately 50% with an increase in temperature ranging from 680 °C to 780 °C. The higher H2/CO ratio at a lower gasification temperature increased the energy density of the combustible constituents of the syngas by 3.43%.  相似文献   

19.
H2S is a kind of common impurity produced during the gasification of biomass, and it will poison the catalysts used in biomass tar steam reforming, leading to a rapid degradation on the catalytic performance. The purpose of this work is to investigate the characteristics of biomass tar steam reforming using Ni/perovskite catalysts with the presence of H2S. Results show that H2S could significantly reduce catalytic activity due to the adsorption of sulfur on Ni surface, and Ni/perovskite catalysts are less susceptible to this poisoning in comparison to the Ni-catalyst loaded on γ-Al2O3. To understand the mechanism, fresh and spent catalysts were characterized using various techniques of XRD, SEM-EDS, XPS and TPO. It is proved that the lattice oxygen in perovskite could transform into surface species, inhibit the adsorption of sulfur and thus benefit to the reactivity of catalysts during biomass tar steam reforming.  相似文献   

20.
《能源学会志》2020,93(1):25-30
Biomass gasification is an attractive option for producing high-quality syngas (H2+CO) due to its environmental advantages and economic benefits. However, due to some technical problems such as tar formation, biomass gasification has not yet been able to achieve its purpose. The purpose of this work was to study the catalytic activity of coal-bottom ash for fuel gas production and tar elimination. Effect of gasification parameters including reaction temperature (700–900 °C), equivalence ratio, EQR (0.15–0.3) and steam-to-biomass ratio, SBR (0.34–1.02) and catalyst loading (5.0–13 wt %) on gas distribution, lower heating value (LHV) of gas steam, tar content, gas yield and H2/CO ratio was studied. The tar content remarkably decreased from 3.81 g/Nm3 to 0.97 g/Nm3 by increasing char-bottom ash from 5.0 wt% to 13.0 wt%. H2/CO significantly increased from 1.12 to 1.54 as the char-bottom ash content in the fuel increased from 5.0 wt% to 13.0 wt%.  相似文献   

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