scholarly journals Effect of Torrefied Wood Biomass under an Oxidizing Environment in a Downdraft Gasification Process

BioResources ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergio Ramos-Carmona ◽  
Juan F. Pérez
2018 ◽  
Vol 121 ◽  
pp. 579-589 ◽  
Author(s):  
William A. González ◽  
Juan F. Pérez ◽  
Sergio Chapela ◽  
Jacobo Porteiro

Author(s):  
Robert Cattolica ◽  
Richard Herz ◽  
James Giolitto ◽  
Matt Summers

An economic and technical analysis of the use of separated wood biomass as a feedstock for gasification for a 3 MW power plant was conducted for the Miramar Landfill, located in San Diego County, CA. The method to generate combustible gas from the biomass is based on a dual-fluidized bed gasification process which operates at atmospheric pressure with air and produces a high quality producer gas with little nitrogen. The objective of the study was to determine the economic feasibility of the proposed biomass power system in terms of the potential revenue streams and costs. Major economic considerations in the analysis include feedstock, capital, and operating costs. Regulatory issues, inclusive of production credits, renewable energy incentives, and feed-in tariffs are addressed as significant economic inputs. The Miramar landfill, in San Diego County, CA is representative of a typical existing urban landfill, with corresponding feedstock and some market for separated wood biomass. The economic analysis of the proposed 3MW gasification power plant indicates that it would not have a net positive NPV under the current urban scenario. More likely successful candidates are landfill sites in more rural areas or urban sites, where new landfills are being developed or where the landfill is no longer operational but has become a transfer station. In all cases waste heat sales are a critical element in determining economic viability.


Author(s):  
Frédéric Paviet ◽  
Florent Chazarenc ◽  
Mohand Tazerout

This article deals with the use of ASPEN PLUS to model the thermo chemical processes occurring in wood biomass gasifiers. An original equilibrium gasification model using ASPEN PLUS was first built and validate based on existing data of a downdraft gasifier (DDG). The thermo chemical models assume that reactants reach chemical equilibrium. The simulations enabled to predict the composition of the flaming pyrolysis gas as well as the final composition of the producer gas. A parametric study based on air/fuel ratio variation was then conducted. The model was finally adapted to the operating conditions of a staged gasifier developed at the Technical University of Denmark (DTU). Parametric studies were conducted to observe the effect of humidity with a low air injection. ASPEN PLUS was shown to be well adapted to model the gasification process (equilibrium), and it was possible to simulate both a DDG and a DTU using the same model. Data about the composition of flaming pyrolysis and the exit gas were obtained.


2020 ◽  
Vol 180 ◽  
pp. 02017
Author(s):  
Gabriela Ionescu ◽  
Raluca Nicoleta Tirtea ◽  
Cora Gheorghe-Bulmau ◽  
Cosmin Marculescu

The purpose of this work was to study the gas yield variation resulted from the cherry wood gasification with air using a lab-scale rotary kiln gasifier. The feedstock was continuously fed into the preheated reactor at 600°C, in co-current configuration, using atmospheric air as a gasifying agent. The results indicate the importance of oxidation reaction control, through the feeding flow rates of biomass and air and the reactants mixing rate. From the experiment, the hydrogen yields were about 2-4%, while the carbon monoxide varied between 8-21%. Additionally, the paper provides process observations based on the continuous monitoring of gas composition. The specific flow rates of substances and installation operating conditions were linked to process run through syngas composition.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 8-12
Author(s):  
Angela Hartati ◽  
Diah Indriani Widiputri ◽  
Arbi Dimyati

This research was conducted for the purpose to overcome Indonesia waste problem. The samples are classified into garden waste, paper waste, wood, food waste, and MSW with objective to identify which type of waste give out more syngas since there is waste separation in Indonesia. All samples were treated by plasma gasification without pre-treatment (drying). Arc plasma torch used in this experiment was made by National Nuclear Energy Agency (BATAN) and used Argon as the gas source. Then the torch was connected to self-designed gasification chamber and gas washing system before injected into a gas bas for composition analysis. Another objective is to identify factors that may affect the gasification efficiency and the experiment shows that moisture content is not really affecting the efficiency but the duration of the process. The mass reduction of each samples were recorded, then the gas produced from the gasification process were analyzed. The result shows that food has the highest mass percentage reduced and producing the highest amount of hydrogen amongst other samples. However, treating MSW also produce considerably high amount of hydrogen. In conclusion, MSW direct treatment (without separation) using plasma gasification is feasible since it still produces desirable quality of syngas.


2007 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 209-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
MINZHE AN ◽  
YUEQIN TANG ◽  
SHIGERU MORIMURA ◽  
KENJI KIDA

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