Dear Dr Karve

Good question! I hope that someone will come through with an exact answer.  
Meanwhile, here are some useful comments.

Gasification produces a gas with well known properties and converts essentially 
all the biomass to a gas of composition

CO 21; H2 19; CH4 5; N2 52; Misc 3 Volume % dry gas basis.

The air/ fuel ratio for gasification is 6/1.  Most of the air is needed to 
convert the 20 % charcoal to CO, as in

C + 1/2 (O2 + 3.76 N2) ==> CO + 1.9 N2

A/F = 11.4

Zxzxzxzx

For wood pyrolysis, the 20% charcoal does not need to be converted, so 

C H1.4 O0.6 ==> 0.4 C + 0.6 "CH2O" +0.1 H2

MW.  23.             4.8.              18.         0.2

The 0.4 C mostly comes from the lignin.  The "CH2O" is the formula for 
CarboHydrates, the cellulose and hemicellulose components of biomass, but is 
broken during pyrolysis.  It would be great if it were broken into CO and H2, 
but that would be very endothermic, so there will be many compounds making up 
"tar", and water and CO2.

In an effort to collect the tar, I operated our woodgas stove in a pyrolysis 
mode by putting a 4" elbow over the secondary air holes and attaching a 
horizontal 4 foot length of water cooled stovepipe.  I did not see any tar, but 
I collected about 1/2 weight % of the fuel as a soot which probably absorbed 
the tar.      

I hope someone will take a sample of the gas and tell us all the components.  

Onward,

Tom Reed   

Dr Thomas B Reed
President, The Biomass Energy Foundation
www.Woodgas.com

On Jan 23, 2011, at 9:24 AM, "Anand Karve" <[email protected]> wrote:

> I would like to know the composition of pyrolysis gas. This has nothing to do 
> with anaerobic digestion but the need for this information arose because of 
> the fact that lignocellulosic material, which represents the largest bulk of 
> biologically produced organic material, cannot generate biogas through A.D. 
> Combustible gas, and of course a lot of tar were produced when I heated dry 
> agricultural waste under anaerobic conditions, but when I consulted 
> konwledgiable persons, and asked them about the composition of this gas, all 
> of them, without exception, informed me that this gas contained about 55% 
> nitrogen, about 40% carbon monoxide and small quantities of hydrogen and 
> methane. This is obviously the composition of producer gas, which is produced 
> when a substance is gassified by burning it. As the process of burning 
> requires air, and since the oxygen is used up in the process of burning, one 
> gets the high nitrogen content in the producer gas. In my experiment, I just 
> heated the material in a closed vessel, The starting material itself has no 
> protein, and no outside air is allowed to get into the vessel. So there can 
> be no nitrogen in the gas (or very little of it).
> 
> Yours
> 
> A.D.Karve 
> 
> -- 
> ***
> Dr. A.D. Karve
> President, Appropriate Rural Technology Institute (ARTI)
> 
> *Please change my email address in your records to: [email protected] *
> 
> 
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