Abstract

The solar gasification of biomass with iron oxide for combined syngas and iron production was investigated. Both solar energy and biomass are promising renewable energies. The process of gasification converts solid carbonaceous feedstocks into either fuels or chemicals. However, conventional processes require partial combustion of the feedstock for energy supply and inherently suffer from high oxygen production costs and low syngas calorific value due to dilution with combustion products. Chemical looping gasification using solid oxides is an alternative option to tackle these issues. By supplying concentrated solar energy as the high-temperature heat source, it is possible to produce even more syngas from the process while enabling solar energy storage into dispatchable fuels. This work proposes to explore solar biomass gasification over iron oxide at high heating rates, representative of the conditions obtained in solar reactors. Thermodynamic equilibriums of gasification reactions between 100 and 1500°C were calculated and experimental results obtained at 1100°C with a specially designed induction furnace were reported for biomass gasification with iron oxide, water or carbon dioxide as oxidizing agents. Solid products analysis showed that iron oxide can be reduced to metallic iron depending on the proportion of the oxygen carrier. These results indicate that iron oxide is an effective material for solar biomass gasification producing both syngas and iron via a novel green metallurgical process.

Highlights

  • Climate change due to greenhouse gases emissions is one of the main current challenges of our society

  • In order to evaluate the relevance of the biomass gasification over iron oxide, a comparison with pyrolysis along with CO2 and H2O gasification was performed

  • This study focused on the combined biomass gasification and iron oxide reduction for both syngas and iron production

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change due to greenhouse gases emissions is one of the main current challenges of our society. Research is very active in this field in order to develop a new energy model. Biomass gasification has been identified as a promising pathway toward the production of renewable fuels with limited greenhouse gas emissions (Kumar et al, 2009; Codina Gironès et al, 2018). The conventional autothermal process needs to burn about 1/3 of the raw biomass feedstock to provide the enthalpy of the reaction. It requires either upstream air separation units (oxy-combustion) or downstream gas separation if air is used as oxidizer or gasification agent, as the products are diluted into nitrogen. In order to supply the required heat, concentrated solar energy has been considered to

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