Influence of char composition and inorganics on catalytic activity of char from biomass gasification
This research investigates the catalytic properties of char which was recovered directly from a biomass gasifier. Poplar wood was gasified in steam and CO2 environments in a fluidized bed reactor at temperatures ranging from 550 to 920°C. Char was composed of 85% carbon with concentrations of N, H,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Fuel (Guildford) 2015-10, Vol.157, p.37-47 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This research investigates the catalytic properties of char which was recovered directly from a biomass gasifier. Poplar wood was gasified in steam and CO2 environments in a fluidized bed reactor at temperatures ranging from 550 to 920°C. Char was composed of 85% carbon with concentrations of N, H, and S between 0.3% and 3%, depending on gasification conditions. The inorganics (Ca, K, Na, P, Si, Mg) were quantified, revealing that Ca was present in the highest concentration (0.5–1%), followed by K, ranging from 0.1% to 0.8%. The char had catalytic activity for decomposition of methane, which was used as a model molecule. The quantity of inorganics in the char was modified by acid washing in 16% aqueous HCl, which removed >95% of Ca, K, P, and Mg from the char. This resulted in an 18% decrease in the quantity of methane reacted compared to the original char sample, demonstrating that inorganics, which only make up approximately 2% of the char, play a significant role in its catalytic activity for methane cracking reactions. In addition, carbon was found to play an important role in the catalytic activity of the char, both as a catalyst and a support on which the inorganics were dispersed. The activity of carbon free ash was approximately 90% lower than that of char, and deactivated to have no measurable activity after 45min on stream, demonstrating the importance of carbon and dispersed inorganics for catalytic activity. When char was heated to 1000°C in N2, inorganics and oxygen migrated to the surface of the char, covering the carbon surface in a metal oxide layer. This decreased the catalytic activity by approximately 40%. Acidic (e.g. carboxylic, lactones) and basic (e.g. carbonyl, pyrone) oxygen functional groups were identified on the char surface. However, acidic oxygen groups desorbed at reaction temperatures, so these groups likely do not participate in cracking reactions. |
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ISSN: | 0016-2361 1873-7153 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.fuel.2015.04.036 |