Green coal development for application in fixed-bed catalytic gasification

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Date
2018Author
Bunt, J.R.
Marx, S.
Waanders, F.B.
Leokaoke, N.T.
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Show full item recordAbstract
A novel ‘green coal’ product formulation has recently been developed and
the utilization concept tested at the North-West University coal research
laboratories. Hydrothermal liquefaction was used to produce bio-oil and
biomass char from sweet sorghum bagasse at operating temperatures
ranging between 280 and 300°C, and the resultant char was mixed in
various ratios (0, 0.25, 0.50, 0.75, and 1) with fine medium-rank C
bituminous discard coal (<212 um) and CaCO3 (1–5 wt%). The mixtures
were pressed into 12 × 12 mm pellets using an LRX press at a pressure of 4
bar and gasified using CO2 at atmospheric pressure and temperatures
ranging between 800 and 1000°C. Kinetic parameters obtained from the
experimental data showed that the reaction rate of the biochar was an order
of magnitude higher than that of raw coal, with the blend containing 3 wt%
CaCO3 having the fastest reaction rate. In order to study the effect of
temperature and catalyst on the retention of elemental sulphur during
combustion of the various pellets, a combustion set-up consisting of a
furnace, glass bayonet-type reactor, Liebig cooler, liquid traps, and an SO2
gas analyser was used, with experiments conducted at temperatures
between 500 and 800°C. As expected, sulphur retention was low for the raw
coal and biochar blends, but increased significantly to between 56 and 86%,
decreasing with increasing temperature, in the runs with added metal
catalyst/sorbent. A simulation using FactSageTM predicted that >50% of the
pyritic sulphur entering the fixed-bed gasifier would be removed from the
gaseous phase as insoluble CaSO4 when operated in a catalytic gasification
mode at a temperature of 800°C, which is in good agreement with the
experimental findings
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/27680http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/2411-9717/2018/v118n4a12
http://www.saimm.co.za/Journal/v118n04p419.pdf
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- Faculty of Engineering [1136]