scholarly journals Investigation of Nonthermal Plasma Assisted Charcoal Gasification for Production of Hydrogen-Rich Syngas

Processes ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yin Pang ◽  
Thomas Hammer ◽  
Dominik Müller ◽  
Jürgen Karl

The motivation of this work is to investigate experimentally the influence of nonthermal plasma (NTP) application on the reaction kinetics of atmospheric pressure steam gasification of charcoal using a thermostatically controlled drop tube reactor. A gliding-arc generator provides about 1 kW electrical power NTP. For comparison thermal gasification is investigated under comparable flow and specific energy input conditions providing additional heat to the steam. Optical temperature measurement 20 cm flow down of the NTP zone is utilized to characterize the specific enthalpy of the reactive flow. The composition of produced syngas is measured by a gas analyzer and used for the calculation of gas flow rates. The results show a NTP-enhancement on the production of individual syngas components (H2, CO, CH4), especially on hydrogen production by around 39%. The syngas-based carbon conversion and hydrogen release are calculated from the carbon and hydrogen balance between the correspondent content in syngas and in the feedstock. The NTP promoted the carbon conversion and hydrogen release by 25% and 31%, respectively. The first-order reaction kinetics are determined by data-fitting in an Arrhenius diagram. The plasma enhanced the reaction rate coefficients by 27%. Based on experimental results and other literature, possible plasma-induced reactions are proposed.

Author(s):  
Yin Pang ◽  
Thomas Hammer ◽  
Dominik Mueller ◽  
Juergen Karl

The motivation of this work is to investigate experimentally the influence of non-thermal plasma (NTP) application on the reaction kinetics of atmospheric pressure steam gasification of charcoal using a thermostatically controlled drop tube reactor. A gliding-arc generator provides about 1 kW electrical power NTP. For comparison thermal gasification is investigated under comparable flow and specific energy input conditions providing additional heat to the steam. Optical temperature measurement 20 cm flow down of the NTP zone is utilized to characterize the specific enthalpy of the reactive flow. The composition of produced syngas is measured by a gas analyzer and used for the calculation of gas flow rates. The results show a NTP-enhancement on the production of individual syngas components (H2, CO, CH4), especially on hydrogen production by around 39%. The syngas-based carbon conversion and hydrogen release are calculated from the carbon and hydrogen balance between the correspondent content in syngas and in the feedstock. The NTP promoted the carbon conversion and hydrogen release by 25% and 31%, respectively. The first-order reaction kinetics are determined by data-fitting in an Arrhenius diagram. The plasma enhanced the reaction rate coefficients by 27%. Based on experimental results and other literature, possible plasma-induced reactions are proposed.


Author(s):  
Yin Pang ◽  
Leo Bahr ◽  
Peter Fendt ◽  
Lars Zigan ◽  
Stefan Will ◽  
...  

Compared to conventional allothermal gasification of solid fuels (e.g. biomass, charcoal, lignite etc.), plasma-assisted gasification offers an efficient method to apply energy into the gasification process to increase the flexibility of operation conditions and to increase the reaction kinetics. In particular, non-thermal plasmas (NTP) are promising, in which thermal equilibrium is not reached and electrons have substantially higher mean energy than gas molecules. Thus it is generally assumed that in NTP the supplied energy is utilized more efficiently for generating free radicals initiating gasification reactions than thermal plasma processes. In order to investigate this hypothesis, we compared purely thermal to non-thermal plasma assisted gasification of biomass in steam in a drop tube reactor at atmospheric pressure. The NTP was provided by means of gliding arcs between two electrodes aligned in the inlet steam flow. Electric power of about 1 kW was supplied using a high voltage generator operating at frequencies between 70 and 150 kHz and voltage amplitudes up to 10 kV. A laser-assisted optical method (Raman spectroscopy) was applied for measuring the gas temperature both in the conventionally heated steam and flow-down of the visible plasma filaments of the gliding arcs. Reaction yields and rates were evaluated using these measured gas temperatures. The first experimental results have shown that the non-thermal plasma not only promotes the carbon conversion of the fuel particles, but also accelerates the reaction kinetics. The carbon conversion is increased by nearly 10% using wood powder as the fuel. With charcoal powder more than 3% are converted into syngas.


Energies ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 1302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yin Pang ◽  
Leo Bahr ◽  
Peter Fendt ◽  
Lars Zigan ◽  
Stefan Will ◽  
...  

1995 ◽  
Vol 398 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Santos-Filho ◽  
G. Stevens ◽  
Z. Lu ◽  
K. Koh ◽  
G. Lucovsky

ABSTRACTWe address aspects of hydrogen bonding and its thermal evolution in amorphous Silicon nitride films grown by Remote Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (RPECVD) from SiH4 and NH3 (or ND3) source gases. Rapid Thermal Annealing (RTA) decreases the Si-H(D) and SiN-H(D) bond populations. The hydrogen bonds break, and H2 (HD, D2) forms and evolves from the film with the heat treatment. This molecular hydrogen release is accompanied by Si- and N- bond healing as detected by a SiN infra red stretch mode signal gain. The ex-situ RTA experiment temperatures ranged from 400 °C to 1200 °C, in 100 °C steps and the film structural changes were monitored by Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) after each incremental anneal. Gas flow ratios R=NH3/SiH4 > 2 produced films in which SiN-H(D) bonds dissociated, and a gas desorption rate equation estimated an activation energy barrier of Ea = 0.3 eV. The release of hydrogen from the films in the form of H2 (D2) and ammonia radicals was detected by mass spectrometry and is shown here. The re-bonding of nitrogen to silicon upon thermal dissociation of hydrogen's is consistent with the improvement of the electrical properties of a-SiN:H films following RTA treatment.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yusuf Rumbino ◽  
Suryo Purwono ◽  
Muslikhin Hidayat ◽  
Hary Sulistyo

2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 3249-3268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federica Sebastiani ◽  
Richard A. Campbell ◽  
Kunal Rastogi ◽  
Christian Pfrang

Abstract. Reactions of the key atmospheric nighttime oxidant NO3 with organic monolayers at the air–water interface are used as proxies for the ageing of organic-coated aqueous aerosols. The surfactant molecules chosen for this study are oleic acid (OA), palmitoleic acid (POA), methyl oleate (MO) and stearic acid (SA) to investigate the effects of chain length, head group and degree of unsaturation on the reaction kinetics and products formed. Fully and partially deuterated surfactants were studied using neutron reflectometry (NR) to determine the reaction kinetics of organic monolayers with NO3 at the air–water interface for the first time. Kinetic modelling allowed us to determine the rate coefficients for the oxidation of OA, POA and MO monolayers to be (2.8±0.7) × 10−8, (2.4±0.5) × 10−8and (3.3±0.6) × 10−8 cm2 molecule−1 s−1 for fitted initial desorption lifetimes of NO3 at the closely packed organic monolayers, τd, NO3, 1, of 8.1±4.0, 16±4.0 and 8.1±3.0 ns, respectively. The approximately doubled desorption lifetime found in the best fit for POA compared to OA and MO is consistent with a more accessible double bond associated with the shorter alkyl chain of POA facilitating initial NO3 attack at the double bond in a closely packed monolayer. The corresponding uptake coefficients for OA, POA and MO were found to be (2.1±0.5) × 10−3, (1.7±0.3) × 10−3 and (2.1±0.4) × 10−3, respectively. For the much slower NO3-initiated oxidation of the saturated surfactant SA we estimated a loss rate of approximately (5±1) × 10−12 cm2 molecule−1 s−1, which we consider to be an upper limit for the reactive loss, and estimated an uptake coefficient of ca. (5±1) × 10−7. Our investigations demonstrate that NO3 will contribute substantially to the processing of unsaturated surfactants at the air–water interface during nighttime given its reactivity is ca. 2 orders of magnitude higher than that of O3. Furthermore, the relative contributions of NO3 and O3 to the oxidative losses vary massively between species that are closely related in structure: NO3 reacts ca. 400 times faster than O3 with the common model surfactant oleic acid, but only ca. 60 times faster with its methyl ester MO. It is therefore necessary to perform a case-by-case assessment of the relative contributions of the different degradation routes for any specific surfactant. The overall impact of NO3 on the fate of saturated surfactants is slightly less clear given the lack of prior kinetic data for comparison, but NO3 is likely to contribute significantly to the loss of saturated species and dominate their loss during nighttime. The retention of the organic character at the air–water interface differs fundamentally between the different surfactant species: the fatty acids studied (OA and POA) form products with a yield of  ∼ 20 % that are stable at the interface while NO3-initiated oxidation of the methyl ester MO rapidly and effectively removes the organic character ( ≤ 3 % surface-active products). The film-forming potential of reaction products in real aerosol is thus likely to depend on the relative proportions of saturated and unsaturated surfactants as well as the head group properties. Atmospheric lifetimes of unsaturated species are much longer than those determined with respect to their reactions at the air–water interface, so they must be protected from oxidative attack, for example, by incorporation into a complex aerosol matrix or in mixed surface films with yet unexplored kinetic behaviour.


2018 ◽  
Vol 51 (6) ◽  
pp. 065202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vesna V Kovačević ◽  
Goran B Sretenović ◽  
Elmar Slikboer ◽  
Olivier Guaitella ◽  
Ana Sobota ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 270-274 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shen SU ◽  
Wen LI ◽  
Zong-qing BAI ◽  
Hong-wei XIANG ◽  
Jin BAI

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