Abstract

Through the use of a metal catalyst, gasification of wet biomass can be accomplished with high levels of carbon conversion to gas at relatively low temperature (350 °C). In a pressurized-water environment (20 MPa), near-total conversion of the organic structure of biomass to gases has been achieved in the presence of a ruthenium metal catalyst. The process is essentially steam reforming, as there is no added oxidizer or reagent other than water. In addition, the gas produced is a medium heating value gas due to the synthesis of high levels of methane, as dictated by thermodynamic equilibrium. While good gas production was demonstrated, biomass trace components caused some processing difficulties in the fixed catalyst bed tubular reactor system used for the catalytic gasification process. Results are described for tests using both bench-scale and scaled-up reactor systems.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call