4.7 Article

CaO-based chemical looping gasification of biomass for hydrogen-enriched gas production with in situ CO2 capture and tar reduction

Journal

FUEL PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY
Volume 127, Issue -, Pages 7-12

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuproc.2014.06.007

Keywords

CaO; Chemical looping gasification; Hydrogen production; CO2 capture; Catalytic tar reforming; Solid circulation rate

Funding

  1. Energy Policy & Planning Office (EPPO) in Thailand
  2. PTT Public Company Limited (Thailand)
  3. Greenfield Research Incorporated
  4. Dalhousie University

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Steam gasification of biomass undergoes the problem of undesirable CO2 and tar formation. Calcium oxide (CaO), when added to the gasification, could play the dual role of tar reforming catalyst and CO2 sorbent, and thereby produce more hydrogen. However, the deactivation of CaO after carbonation reaction is challenging for continuous hydrogen production and economical perspective. The concept of CaO-based chemical looping gasification (CaO-CLG) plays a key role in overcoming such a challenge. This work primarily aims at studying steam gasification of biomass with the presence of CaO in a uniquely designed chemical looping gasification (CLG) system for hydrogen production with in situ CO2 capture and tar reduction. The effect of solid circulation rates on gas and tar production is studied. A comparison of CaO-CLG, sand-based chemical looping gasification (Sand-CLG) and CaO-based bubbling fluidized bed gasification (CaO-BFBG) is presented mainly focusing on gas and tar production. The maximum H-2 and minimum CO2 concentrations as well as maximum H-2 yields of 78%, 4.98% and 451.11 ml (STP)/g of biomass, respectively, are obtained at the solid circulation rate of 1.04 kg/m(2)s. At the same point, the maximum total gas yield was 578.38 ml (STP)/g of biomass and the tar content of 2.48 g/Nm(3) was the lowest. 30% higher concentration of H-2 and triple yield of H-2 were found in CaO-CLG compared to Sand-CLG. Compared to CaO-BFBG, CaO-CLG resulted in 15% higher concentration of H-2 and almost double yield of H-2. Moreover, the lowest tar content of 2.48 g/Nm(3) was obtained for CaO-CLG while the tar content was 68.5 g/Nm(3) for Sand-CLG and 26.71 g/Nm(3) for CaO-BFBG. CO2 concentration obtained for CaO-CLG also significantly reduced by 13-17% as compared to both Sand-CLG and CaO-BFBG. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available