Assignment: Topic
Assignment: Topic
Topic;
Gasification
Subject;
Energy Engineering
Assigned by;
Sir Ayyaz Ahmad
Prepared by;
Junaid Anwar (2017-CH-716)
Talha Bhutta (2017-CH-715)
Semester;
6th
Date;
13-08-2020
The syngas can be further converted or shifted by adding steam and reacting over
a catalyst in a water-gas-shift reactor to hydrogen and carbon dioxide (CO2).
Only a tiny amount of oxygen is required for Gasification which is combined with
steam and cooked under intense pressure. A gaseous mixture composed primarily
of carbon monoxide and hydrogen is produced by a series of reactions. This
syngas can be burned directly or used as a starting point to manufacture fertilizers,
pure hydrogen, methane or liquid transportation fuels.
Brief history
Processes of Gasification
1) Drying
2) Pyrolysis
3) Combustion
4) Cracking
5) Reduction
Now we will discuss these in brief detail;
1) Drying
Drying is the removal of the moisture contents in the biomass before it enters
Pyrolysis. All the moisture needed to be removed from the fuel before any above
100°C processes happen.
Fuel with the high moisture content or poor handling of the moisture internally, is
one of the most common reasons for failure to produce clean gas.
2) Pyrolysis
Pyrolysis is the process to heat the raw biomass in the absence of the air to break
it down into charcoal and various tar gasses and liquids.
Once the temperature rises the above around the 240°C the biomass rapidly
decompose with heat.
The biomass breaks down into a combination of solids, liquids and gasses. The
solids that remain we commonly call charcoal. The gasses and liquids that are
released we collectively call tars.
3) Combustion
Combustion is the only net exothermic process in the gasification process.
All of the heat is recovered from the combustion process that drives drying,
pyrolysis, and reduction.
Combustion can be fueled by either the tar gasses or char from Pyrolysis.
Different reactor types use one or the other or both.
4) Cracking
Cracking is the process in which the break down of large complex molecules such
as tar into lighter gases take place by exposure to heat.
For the production of clean gas this process is crucial that is compatible with an
internal combustion engine because tar gases condense into sticky tar that can
cause rapidly fouling the valves of an engine.
To ensure the proper combustion cracking is also necessary because complete
combustion only occurs when combustible gases
thoroughly mix with oxygen. The high
temperatures produced decompose the large tar
molecules that pass through the combustion zone.
5) Reduction
Gasifier classification
Air gasification is the most widely applied process because the gasification
agent is cheap, the reaction process is easy and the reactor structure is simple.
The biomass gasification with air or oxygen, the overall gasification may be
endothermic or exothermic and these reactions can be controlled or changed
by varying the air or oxygen content.
Gasifier classification
Based on the gasifiers;
1) Fixed bed gasifiers (or moving bed gasifiers)
i. updraft
i. downdraft
ii. horizontal-draft
2) Fluidized bed gasifiers
i. bubbling fluidized bed
ii. circulated fluidized bed
iii. double circulated fluidized bed
3) Entrained flow gasifiers
Comparison of Gasifiers
1) Fixed bed gasifier
3) Entrained flow
i. Large capacity (60–1000 MW)
SYNGAS COMPOSITION
This can vary significantly depending on the feedstock and the gasification
process involved, however typically syngas is;
Gasification Applications
1. Microscale applications;
4. Other Applications;
Pulp industries
Cement industries
Metallurgy
References
1. http://www.allpowerlabs.com/gasification-explained
2. https://www.netl.doe.gov/research/Coal/energy-
systems/gasification/gasifipedia/intro-to-gasification
3. https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/earth-and-planetary-sciences/gasification
4. https://ankurscientific.com/blog/2018/10/07/application-of-gasifie