4.8 Article

Catalytic conversion of gaseous tars using land, coastal and marine biomass-derived char catalysts in a bench-scale downstream combined fixed bed system

Journal

BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 304, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2020.122735

Keywords

Biomass; Gasification; Tar removal; Catalyst; Biochar; Char property

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [2157060571, 21576294, 21706287]
  2. Taishan Scholar Foundation of Shandong Province [tsqn201812028]
  3. Department of Science and Technology of Shandong Province [2018CXGC0301]
  4. Qingdao Municipal Science and Technology Bureau [16-6-2-51nsh, 18-6-1-101-nsh]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [18CX05022A]
  6. Independent Innovation Research Project of China University of Petroleum (East China) [YJ201601066]
  7. Postgraduate Innovation Funding Project of China University of Petroleum (East China) [YCX2019033]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The catalytic activity of biochar for tar removal was evaluated in a bench-scale combined fixed bed reactor by comparison of gaseous tar catalytic cracking behaviors over land (Corn stalks, Cs), coastal (Reed, Re) and marine (Sargassum horneri, Sh) char catalyst. The experiments demonstrated that the tar yield after addition of the biochar was reduced significantly; the tar conversion efficiency reached to 94.6% for catalytic at 850 degrees C with 50 mm char bed length using Re char. And the yield and composition of gas also changed markedly. The percentage of H-2 and CO in the product gas were obviously increased. Sh has a higher H-2 content (49.3% of the total gas content), whereas, CO dominated in the gas products for Cs (45.4%) and Re (48.1%). The results from GC-MS analysis illustrated that the increase in temperature promoted the tar cracking and also promotes the polymerization of some tar components.

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