CO will only breakdown to C and CO2 at elevated temperatures, called the 
Bourdard reaction. At gas sampling temperatures, it should be quite stable for 
a long time. There are continuous gas analyzers that can measure every molecule 
or atom in real time and miss many that are not considered in normal gas 
analyses such as methanol, acetic acid, ethanol, and other complex organic 
compounds produced by gasifiers. 50% CO could be possible under a pure steam 
fired gasifier, but is doubtful, and the wiggle room of not being able to 
measure it leads to further incredulity of their claim. 


Sincerely,

Leland T. "Tom" Taylor
Thermogenics Inc. 
+001-505-463-8422 
www.thermogenicx.com
Skype: ltt.invent



-----Original Message-----
From: Indika Gallage <[email protected]>
To: 'Discussion of biomass pyrolysis and gasification' 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Thu, Jun 29, 2017 9:16 am
Subject: Re: [Gasification] Gas Sampling



Hello Doug,
The gasifier has not been tested yet, but the designers claim to have 50% CO in 
the gas with previous gasifiers, which was unimaginable to me. When we were 
speaking of sampling the gas, we have been warned that the CO of the gas may 
convert while sampling. This is why  I am researching on the fact. 
 
Certainly, the most sensible thing is a directly coupled gas analyser. The 
equipment is rather costly; we will have to use the inline measurements if we 
get lower readings from sampling to confirm.
 
Thank you for your time and a very clear explanation.
 
Best Regards 
 
Indika
 
 

From: Gasification [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Doug
Sent: June 28, 2017 8:30 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Gasification] Gas Sampling

 
Hi Indika,
The short answer to your question is no, water vapor as you describe will not 
result in lowering the CO content of your gas sample. It is not clear if you 
expect to get 50% CO from your gas, which when analyzed has a lower CO content. 
I have never seen producer gas with 50% CO content, but if you had a directly 
coupled gas analyzer measuring continuously, you could expect to see 
fluctuations depending on the system design and variation of fuel being 
gasified. Any gas sample is only valid for the moment in time that it was 
taken, but the key is to minimize, or understand why the system fluctuates.
We have had gas analysis done over 35 years, and samples collected in metal, 
glass, and gas  bags, in each case water was used to collect the sample by 
drainage suction. None of the measuring laboratories had issues with residue 
moisture affecting the results. The only exception to the containment 
limitations, were the gas bags, where-by the analysis must be done within three 
days due to the H2 content escaping through the bag walls.
Hope this might help.
Doug Williams,
Fluidyne.
 
 

On 28/06/17 07:57, Indika Gallage wrote:


 
Question:
I have been using gas chromatography to analyse the producer gas mixture. I 
would like to know, if the gas sample extracted from the gasifier will change 
it’s CO composition significantly with the presence of water vapor? We have to 
sample a gas with 50% CO. 
 
I have gone through a research paper where they suggest that the composition 
will not significantly vary, but these samples did not have the high 
concentration of CO. However, the content of CO had the most variation out of 
all the gasses, the conclusion of this paper was that the gasses did not change 
composition at -15 C, 15c , 45C at 2758 and Kpa 8274 Kpa pressure. (“Evaluation 
of syngas storage under different pressures and temperatures”,  Yang P,2009, 
Applied Engineering in Agriculture) 
 
can some one shed some light on this?

 

 

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