Abstract

In this work, we employed a computational fluid dynamics (CFD)-based model with a Eulerian multiphase approach to simulate the fluidization hydrodynamics in biomass gasification processes. Air was used as the gasifying/fluidizing agent and entered the gasifier at the bottom which subsequently fluidized the solid particles inside the reactor column. The momentum exchange related to the gas-phase was simulated by considering various viscous models (i.e., laminar and turbulence models of the re-normalisation group (RNG), k-ε and k-ω). The pressure drop gradient obtained by employing each viscous model was plotted for different superficial velocities and compared with the experimental data for validation. The turbulent model of RNG k-Ɛ was found to best represent the actual process. We also studied the effect of air distributor plates with different pore diameters (2, 3 and 5 mm) on the momentum of the fluidizing fluid. The plate with 3-mm pores showed larger turbulent viscosities above the surface. The effects of drag models (Syamlal–O’Brien, Gidaspow and energy minimum multi-scale method (EMMS) on the bed’s pressure drop as well as on the volume fractions of the solid particles were investigated. The Syamlal–O’Brien model was found to forecast bed pressure drops most consistently, with the pressure drops recorded throughout the experimental process. The formation of bubbles and their motion along the gasifier height in the presence of the turbulent flow was seen to follow a different pattern from with the laminar flow.

Highlights

  • Owing to the renewable, sustainable and environmentally-friendly nature of biomass-based energy generation, over the past few years, it has attracted a great deal of interest within both the scientific community and the industrial sector

  • Reliable models can facilitate the investigation of thermochemical processes associated with biomass gasification; likewise, they help to study and evaluate the effects of the operational parameters on the gasifier performance and product quality [6]

  • A large number of numerical modelling and simulation studies have been reported in literature on the complex behaviour of gas–solid mixing, as well as on the fluidization hydrodynamics, in order to formulate the problems and to devise solutions

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Summary

Introduction

Sustainable and environmentally-friendly nature of biomass-based energy generation, over the past few years, it has attracted a great deal of interest within both the scientific community and the industrial sector. Such challenges comprise the complex chemical reactions propagation inside the fluidizing zone and the restrictions imposed through process control and difficulty in the prediction of momentum patterns caused by the turbulent behaviour of the gas flow and moving particles [5]. Reliable models can facilitate the investigation of thermochemical processes associated with biomass gasification; likewise, they help to study and evaluate the effects of the operational parameters on the gasifier performance and product quality [6]. Numerical models and simulation studies for biomass gasification using either Eulerian [7,8,9,10,11] or Lagrangian (discrete element) [12,13,14] models have been the focus of many researchers in recent years. A large number of numerical modelling and simulation studies have been reported in literature on the complex behaviour of gas–solid mixing, as well as on the fluidization hydrodynamics, in order to formulate the problems and to devise solutions

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