Biomass gasification to syngas in thermal water vapor arc discharge plasma.
Andrius TamošiūnasDovilė GimžauskaitėMindaugas AikasRolandas UscilaVilma SnapkauskienėKęstutis ZakarauskasMarius PraspaliauskasPublished in: Biomass conversion and biorefinery (2023)
This study investigated biomass (wood pellets) gasification to syngas using direct current (DC) thermal arc plasma at atmospheric pressure. Water vapor was used as a main gasifying agent and a plasma-forming gas. The biomass gasification system was quantified in terms of the producer gas composition, the tar content, the H 2 /CO ratio, the carbon conversion efficiency, the energy conversion efficiency and the specific energy requirements. It was found that the gasification performance efficiency was highest at the water vapor-to-biomass ratio of 0.97. The producer gas was mostly composed of H 2 (43.86 vol.%) and CO (30.93 vol.%), giving the H 2 /CO ratio of 1.42 and the LHV of 10.23 MJ/Nm 3 . However, high content of tars of 13.81 g/Nm 3 was obtained in the syngas. The yield of H 2 and CO was 48.31% and 58.13%, respectively, with the highest producer gas yield of 2.42 Nm 3 /kg biomass. The carbon conversion efficiency and the energy conversion efficiency were 100% and 48.83%, respectively, and the production of 1 kg of syngas required 1.78 kWh of electric energy input. Finally, the obtained results were compared with different plasma methods, including plasma-assisted application coupled with conventional gasification.