Abstract

A slurry of bio-oil and char originating from wood pyrolysis is a promising gasifier feed-stock because of its high energy density. When such a slurry is injected into a high temperature gasifier it undergoes a rapid pyrolysis yielding a char which then reacts with steam. The char produced by pyrolysis of an 80 wt% bio-oil/20 wt% char mixture at heating rates of 100–10,000 °C/s was subjected to steam gasification in a thermogravimetric analyzer. The original wood char from the bio-oil production was also tested. Gasification was conducted with 10–50 mol% steam at temperatures from 800 to 1200 °C. Reactivity of the slurry chars increased with pyrolysis heating rate, but was lower than that of the original chars. Kinetic parameters were established for a power-law rate model of the steam-char reaction, and compared to values from the literature. At temperatures over 1000 °C, the gasification rates appeared to be affected by diffusional resistance.

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