Abstract

Biomass gasification offers a solution to waste concerns while generating clean energy. This study examines the gasification of pine sawdust (PS), used ground coffee (UGC), and wheat straw (WS) under identical conditions. The compositions of the biomass samples are determined, and the gasification of individual components (hemicellulose, cellulose, and lignin) are conducted to understand the process’ dependency on the biomass characteristics. The results suggest cellulose and cellulose-rich biomass (PS) produces more tar and less hydrogen than lignin and lignin-rich biomass (UGC and WS). High lignin and hemicellulose content leave more char. Gasification of PS, UGC, and WS yields 12.7, 15.7, and 17.2 vol% hydrogen, respectively. Additionally, cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin gasification yield 10.5, 22.1, and 30.4 vol% hydrogen, respectively. Comparing experimental and theoretical values for the three biomass samples reveals significant differences due to component interactions. Thermogravimetry analysis (TGA) indicates significant degradation interactions between hemicellulose-lignin, cellulose-hemicellulose, and cellulose-lignin. It is concluded that high cellulose content biomass shows more predictable results, while high lignin and hemicellulose biomass increases secondary reactions or interactions, exacerbating predictability. These findings assist in estimating gasification performance for better biomass selection.

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