Tar abatement using dolomites during the gasification of pine sawdust

Biofuels like ethanol are gaining serious momentum because of concerns over climate change and the rising cost of fossil fuels. Saskatchewan is the first province in Canada to pass a law requiring ethanol blended into its gasoline. A blend rate of 7.5% is mandated as of January 2007. This legislatio...

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Main Author: Siemens Gusta, Elizabeth Ursula
Other Authors: Tabil, Lope G.
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: University of Saskatchewan 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://library.usask.ca/theses/available/etd-09152008-214651/
id ndltd-USASK-oai-usask.ca-etd-09152008-214651
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic catalysis
Gasification
biomass
biofuel
spellingShingle catalysis
Gasification
biomass
biofuel
Siemens Gusta, Elizabeth Ursula
Tar abatement using dolomites during the gasification of pine sawdust
description Biofuels like ethanol are gaining serious momentum because of concerns over climate change and the rising cost of fossil fuels. Saskatchewan is the first province in Canada to pass a law requiring ethanol blended into its gasoline. A blend rate of 7.5% is mandated as of January 2007. This legislation is not yet fully enforced as ethanol production cannot currently meet demand, but local production is increasing. The traditional method of production is via grain fermentation; however the food versus fuel debate indicates this is unethical when food shortages and prices are already on the rise. Gasification is a robust technology for processing raw, non-food grade biomass into syngas (H2 and CO) which can then be further converted to ethanol via gas-to-liquid conversion technology. Condensable materials called tars form during gasification and must be further converted to gaseous products to avoid problems downstream. This can be achieved via optimization of process conditions and catalysis. The research for this thesis was carried out in two phases. Phase 1 examined the effects of process conditions on the noncatalytic temperature-programmed gasification of wood (Jack Pine) biomass. Temperature was varied from 700 to 825oC, water flow rate was varied from 2 to 5 cm3/h, and N2 flow rate from 16 to 32 cm3/min. When varying biomass gasification conditions, overall % carbon conversion to gaseous products reached a maximum of 70% at 825oC, 5.0 cm3/h H2O, and 32 cm3/min N2. 670 cm3 product gas per g biomass was produced, with 35.8 mol% H2 and H2:CO of 1.56. In Phase 2, catalytic gasification of wood biomass was carried out using a double bed micro reactor in a two-stage process. Temperature programmed steam gasification of biomass was performed in the first bed at 200-850oC. Following in the second bed was isothermal catalytic decomposition gasification of volatile compounds (including tars). Dolomites from Canada, Australia and Japan were examined for their effects on tar abatement and the overall gaseous product. The gasification of pine sawdust resulted in 74% of carbon emitted as volatile matter during tar gasification (200-500oC biomass bed temperature). High temperature, high H2O flow rate and low carrier gas flow rate are recommended for improving biomass conversion to gaseous products. Dolomites improved tar decomposition by an average 21% at 750oC isothermal catalyst bed temperature. For Canadian dolomites, iron content was found to promote tar conversion and the water-gas shift reaction, but the effectiveness reached a plateau at 1.0 wt% Fe present in dolomite. The best dolomite was Canada # 1, from an area west of Flin Flon, Manitoba. This dolomite yielded 66% tar conversion (25% above noncatalytic results) at 750oC using 1.6 cm3 catalyst/g biomass. Carbon conversion increased to 97% using 3.2 cm3 catalyst/g biomass at the same temperature. The dolomite seemed stable after 15 hours of cyclic use at 800oC.
author2 Tabil, Lope G.
author_facet Tabil, Lope G.
Siemens Gusta, Elizabeth Ursula
author Siemens Gusta, Elizabeth Ursula
author_sort Siemens Gusta, Elizabeth Ursula
title Tar abatement using dolomites during the gasification of pine sawdust
title_short Tar abatement using dolomites during the gasification of pine sawdust
title_full Tar abatement using dolomites during the gasification of pine sawdust
title_fullStr Tar abatement using dolomites during the gasification of pine sawdust
title_full_unstemmed Tar abatement using dolomites during the gasification of pine sawdust
title_sort tar abatement using dolomites during the gasification of pine sawdust
publisher University of Saskatchewan
publishDate 2008
url http://library.usask.ca/theses/available/etd-09152008-214651/
work_keys_str_mv AT siemensgustaelizabethursula tarabatementusingdolomitesduringthegasificationofpinesawdust
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spelling ndltd-USASK-oai-usask.ca-etd-09152008-2146512013-01-08T16:33:27Z Tar abatement using dolomites during the gasification of pine sawdust Siemens Gusta, Elizabeth Ursula catalysis Gasification biomass biofuel Biofuels like ethanol are gaining serious momentum because of concerns over climate change and the rising cost of fossil fuels. Saskatchewan is the first province in Canada to pass a law requiring ethanol blended into its gasoline. A blend rate of 7.5% is mandated as of January 2007. This legislation is not yet fully enforced as ethanol production cannot currently meet demand, but local production is increasing. The traditional method of production is via grain fermentation; however the food versus fuel debate indicates this is unethical when food shortages and prices are already on the rise. Gasification is a robust technology for processing raw, non-food grade biomass into syngas (H2 and CO) which can then be further converted to ethanol via gas-to-liquid conversion technology. Condensable materials called tars form during gasification and must be further converted to gaseous products to avoid problems downstream. This can be achieved via optimization of process conditions and catalysis. The research for this thesis was carried out in two phases. Phase 1 examined the effects of process conditions on the noncatalytic temperature-programmed gasification of wood (Jack Pine) biomass. Temperature was varied from 700 to 825oC, water flow rate was varied from 2 to 5 cm3/h, and N2 flow rate from 16 to 32 cm3/min. When varying biomass gasification conditions, overall % carbon conversion to gaseous products reached a maximum of 70% at 825oC, 5.0 cm3/h H2O, and 32 cm3/min N2. 670 cm3 product gas per g biomass was produced, with 35.8 mol% H2 and H2:CO of 1.56. In Phase 2, catalytic gasification of wood biomass was carried out using a double bed micro reactor in a two-stage process. Temperature programmed steam gasification of biomass was performed in the first bed at 200-850oC. Following in the second bed was isothermal catalytic decomposition gasification of volatile compounds (including tars). Dolomites from Canada, Australia and Japan were examined for their effects on tar abatement and the overall gaseous product. The gasification of pine sawdust resulted in 74% of carbon emitted as volatile matter during tar gasification (200-500oC biomass bed temperature). High temperature, high H2O flow rate and low carrier gas flow rate are recommended for improving biomass conversion to gaseous products. Dolomites improved tar decomposition by an average 21% at 750oC isothermal catalyst bed temperature. For Canadian dolomites, iron content was found to promote tar conversion and the water-gas shift reaction, but the effectiveness reached a plateau at 1.0 wt% Fe present in dolomite. The best dolomite was Canada # 1, from an area west of Flin Flon, Manitoba. This dolomite yielded 66% tar conversion (25% above noncatalytic results) at 750oC using 1.6 cm3 catalyst/g biomass. Carbon conversion increased to 97% using 3.2 cm3 catalyst/g biomass at the same temperature. The dolomite seemed stable after 15 hours of cyclic use at 800oC. Tabil, Lope G. Hill, Gordon A. Dalai, Ajay K. Wang, Hui University of Saskatchewan 2008-09-18 text application/pdf http://library.usask.ca/theses/available/etd-09152008-214651/ http://library.usask.ca/theses/available/etd-09152008-214651/ en unrestricted I hereby certify that, if appropriate, I have obtained and attached hereto a written permission statement from the owner(s) of each third party copyrighted matter to be included in my thesis, dissertation, or project report, allowing distribution as specified below. I certify that the version I submitted is the same as that approved by my advisory committee. I hereby grant to University of Saskatchewan or its agents the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible, under the conditions specified below, my thesis, dissertation, or project report in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all other ownership rights to the copyright of the thesis, dissertation or project report. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis, dissertation, or project report.