Pilot scale autothermal gasification of coconut shell with CO2-O2 mixture
Pilot scale autothermal gasification of coconut shell with CO2-O2 mixture作者机构:Department of Environmental Science and Technology Tokyo Institute of Technology Yokohama 226-8503 Japan Institute of Energy and Power Engineering Zhejiang University of Technology Hangzhou 310014 China Department of Chemical Engineering Institut Teknologi Bandung Bandung 40132 Indonesia Division of Energy Science Lulea University of Technology Lulea 971 87 Sweden Institute of Energy and Power Engineering Zhejiang University of Technology Hangzhou 310014 China Department of Environmental Science and Technology Tokyo Institute of Technology Yokohama 226-8503 Japan
出 版 物:《Frontiers in Energy》 (能源前沿(英文版))
年 卷 期:2015年第9卷第3期
页 面:362-370页
核心收录:
学科分类:081702[工学-化学工艺] 08[工学] 0817[工学-化学工程与技术]
主 题:Keywords biomass gasification CO2 downdrafl gasifier,autothermal
摘 要:This paper explored the feasibility and benefit of CO2 utilization as gasifying agent in the autothermal gasification process. The effects of CO2 injection on reaction temperature and producer gas composition were examined in a pilot scale downdraft gasifier by varying the CO2/C ratio from 0.6 to 1.6. O2 was injected at an equivalence ratio of approximately 0.33-0.38 for supply- ing heat through partial combustion. The results were also compared with those of air gasification. In general, the increase in CO2 injection resulted in the shift of combustion zone to the downstream of the gasifier. However, compared with that of air gasification, the long and distributed high temperature zones were obtained in CO2-O2 gasification with a CO2/C ratio of 0.6-1.2. The progress of the expected CO2 to CO conversion can be implied from the relatively insignificant decrease in CO fraction as the CO2/C ratio increased. The producer gas heating value of CO2-O2 gasification was consistently higher than that of air gasification. These results show the potential of CO2-O2 gasification for producing high qualityproducer gas in an efficient manner, and the necessity for more work to deeply imply the observation.