4.7 Article

Experimental investigation of the synergy effect of partial oxidation and bio-char on biomass tar reduction

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANALYTICAL AND APPLIED PYROLYSIS
Volume 112, Issue -, Pages 262-269

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaap.2015.01.016

Keywords

Partial oxidation; Bio-char; Tar reduction; Synergy effect; Carbon deposition

Funding

  1. NSFC [51176120, 51476098]
  2. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality [12dz1202800]

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In order to reveal the synergy effect of partial oxidation and bio-char on tar reduction and develop more efficient tar removal method, the tar and bio-char evolution properties were investigated on a bench-scaled fixed-bed reactor. The tar components, tar conversion rates, physical and chemical structure of bio-char after reaction at the second stage were sampled and analyzed. Results showed that at 700 degrees C, the coupling of char and oxygen could result in the significant improvement of tar conversion rate (89.32%) than both two separated method (85.1% and 86.14%). At 900 degrees C, the synergy effect could reach the highest conversion rate of 95.84%. High oxygen concentration coupling with char may lead to carbon deposition and bring down tar conversion rate at 800 degrees C. But a light amount of oxygen greatly promoted the formation of porosity. The reaction between tar and bio-char at high temperature (800 degrees C above) was in favor of toluene conversion. The coupling of char and partial oxidation benefited the elimination of larger PAHs tar compounds as well as toluene. BET analysis results showed that oxygen promoted the development of bio-char porosity at 700 degrees C and 900 degrees C under all oxygen concentrations. Slight amount of oxygen would benefit the char pore development, but high oxygen concentration (5%) would lead to the carbon deposition on char pore surface at 800 degrees C. FTIR results indicated that temperature and oxygen promoted the aromatic or graphitization of bio-char. The IR band peak of 1060 cm(-1) showed the similar tendency with aromatic ring band peak, which meant more carbon deposition on the surface of char pore but not graphitization. The coupling of partial oxidation and char catalysis is a feasible method for tar reduction of biomass tar. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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