Abstract

Synthetic gas generated from the gasification of biomass feedstocks is one of the clean and sustainable energy sources. In this work, a fixed-bed downdraft gasifier was used to perform the gasification on a lab-scale of rice husk, sawdust, and coconut shell. The aim of this work is to find and compare the synthetic gas generation characteristics and prospects of sawdust and coconut shell with rice husk. A temperature range of 650–900 °C was used to conduct gasification of these three biomass feedstocks. The feed rate of rice husk, sawdust, and coconut shell was 3–5 kg/h, while the airflow rate was 2–3 m3/h. Experimental results show that the highest generated quantity of methane (vol.%) in synthetic gas was achieved by using coconut shell than sawdust and rice husk. It also shows that hydrogen production was higher in the gasification of coconut shell than sawdust and rice husk. In addition, emission generations in coconut shell gasification are lower than rice husk although emissions of rice husk gasification are even lower than fossil fuel. Rice husk, sawdust, and coconut shell are cost-effective biomass sources in Bangladesh. Therefore, the outcomes of this paper can be used to provide clean and economic energy sources for the near future.

Highlights

  • Sustainability13,2021 x FOR PEER REVIEWReceived: 2021, Global energy demand is increasing drastically with industrial development and Accepted: 9 February 2021Published: 13 February 2021 human civilization [1,2,3]

  • Outcomes of this study showed that emissions of rice husk, sawdust, and coconut shell gasification were lower when compared with fossil fuels such as diesel

  • A downdraft fixed-bed gasifier was used for the gasification of rice husk, sawdust, and coconut shell

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Sustainability13,2021 x FOR PEER REVIEWReceived: 2021, Global energy demand is increasing drastically with industrial development and Accepted: 9 February 2021Published: 13 February 2021 human civilization [1,2,3]. Received: 2021, Global energy demand is increasing drastically with industrial development and Accepted: 9 February 2021. Published: 13 February 2021 human civilization [1,2,3]. Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in Year.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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