Eric,

 

The APL Power Pallet passes hot gas around the feed hopper which helps dry the 
feedstock. It also uses engine exhaust to dry and torrefy the incoming fuel. 
That is probably what allowed us to gasify 35% MC fuel. Normal fuel is intended 
to contain about 15-20 % MC but was not available during commissioning. 

See http://gekgasifier.com/gasification-store/gasifier-genset-skids/

 

Tom

 

From: Gasification [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of eric roy
Sent: Saturday, October 20, 2012 1:28 PM
To: Discussion of biomass pyrolysis and gasification
Subject: Re: [Gasification] Can small wood-gas systems lower rural energy costs?

 

Hi, 

 

These projects looks great, but I'm curious, if you can improve reliability and 
efficiency just by lowering the  moisture content in the feed, then how come 
these types of systems don't incorporate a hopper design that would help dry 
feed stock? Such as by recapturing the heat from the exhaust or the heat from 
the engine's radiator.

 

Thanks

Eric 

 

 

  _____  

From: Tom Miles <[email protected]>
To: Discussion of biomass pyrolysis and gasification 
<[email protected]> 
Sent: Saturday, 20 October 2012 5:35 PM
Subject: [Gasification] Can small wood-gas systems lower rural energy costs?

 

Jim Mason and mill personnel installed two All Power Labs Power Pallets – 10 
kWe and 20 kWe - this week at a sawmill in SE Alaska as part of a project for 
Sealaska Corporation to demonstrate small scale power generation. Owner Wes 
Tyler and Thomas Deerfield chipped the fuel while I did the arm waving and 
entertained visiting locals. We ran the 20 kWe unit on wet (35% MC) spruce 
chips. It ran very well. We did collect a lot of condensate in the final trap 
before the engine but there was no sign of tars or sticky char in the filters.  

 

See the Coast Alaska news story at 
http://www.krbd.org/2012/10/19/can-small-wood-gas-systems-lower-rural-energy-costs/
  

 

Mill personnel will run the gasifiers this winter. If all goes well we may 
install one of the gasifier at the Icy Point resort where cruise ships visit an 
old cannery. The resort is owned by the Hoonah tribal corporation. Businesses 
in Hoonah pay up to $0.67/kWe without subsidy so fuel/power is a substantial 
cost. Locals are looking for opportunities to generate power and heat 
greenhouses to grow fresh vegetables.  

 

Andy Soria, Professor of Wood Chemistry and Applied Environmental Science and 
Technology at University of Alaska has had GEKS’s for a couple of years and 
Bernie Karl in Fairbanks has run a small GEK with an engine but these are the 
first gasifier-gensets to be installed in an Alaskan village since the Alaska 
Village Electric Coop project by Marenco (Joe Marks) in the early 1980s. 

 

Tom Miles

 

 

 


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