Ahsanullah Soomro, Shiyi Chen, Mahdi Hassan Mallah, Imran Ahmed Samo, Asif Ali Siyal, Babar Ali, Kamran Ahmed Samo, Shiwei Ma, Kishan Chand Mukwana, Wenguo Xiang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This study investigates the gasification of cellulose, lignin, corn stover (rich in cellulose) and walnut shells (rich in lignin) using CaO as a catalyst. The objective was to understand the effect of the different biomass components on the gasification products and the performance of the CaO catalyst. Notable results indicate distinctive product distribution: cellulose yields higher liquid (58%) and CO (95.36%) products, while lignin produces increased H2 (47.88%), CH4 (34.34%), and CO2 (29.58%). Gasification of biomass feedstocks, corn stover (cellulose-rich) and walnut shell (lignin-rich), aligns with pure cellulose and lignin trends. Catalyst characterization highlights that cellulose exhibits a greater tendency for coke formation, leading to elevated tar compounds and coke deposition on the catalyst surface. The solid residue from cellulose gasification displays a smaller pore volume (5.70 m2/g) and specific surface area, indicating undesirable catalyst rearrangement. XRD analysis indicates a higher carbonation rate of CaO in lignin-rich gasification, leading to increased CaCO3 formation. Further results show a higher CO2 concentration (3.35 mol/kg) and lower CO production (0.54 mol/kg) in corn stover gasification, contrasting with walnut shell (CO2: 14.24 mol/kg, CO: 1.24 mol/kg). The study underscores the quantitative assessment of biomass composition for optimizing gasification processes, vital for catalyst selection and ensuring efficient CO2 capture in industrial applications.
期刊介绍:
BioEnergy Research fills a void in the rapidly growing area of feedstock biology research related to biomass, biofuels, and bioenergy. The journal publishes a wide range of articles, including peer-reviewed scientific research, reviews, perspectives and commentary, industry news, and government policy updates. Its coverage brings together a uniquely broad combination of disciplines with a common focus on feedstock biology and science, related to biomass, biofeedstock, and bioenergy production.