Greg,

 

As long as you have a way of removing the clinkered ash and breaking it up you 
can make gas. Components in straw sinter and melt at about 750 ⁰C. Oxidation 
temperatures are typically 1000 ⁰C. In a downdraft gasifier you concentrate the 
slagging components in the char and either sweep it through with unreacted char 
or melt it. For that reason most gasification of crop residues has historically 
been with updraft gasifiers with active grates. 

 

You’ll find a review of “Commercialization Development of Crop Straw 
Gasification technologies in China” open access at 
http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/6/12/9159 (Zhang 2014 in Sustainability). The 
current development in China is to pyrolyze the crop straw with external heat 
and convert the char to a biochar fertilizer. 

 

Rice husk gasifiers proliferated in Cambodia and Myanmar during periods of high 
diesel prices.  Simple downdraft models were built with wet scrubbers. At one 
point effluent from the scrubbers caused severe pollution problems in Myanmar. 
Environmental impacts were analyzed in Cambodia. High temperatures created 
cristobalite silica issues in some gasifiers. There are some good analyses of 
the performance of these systems. Many are copies of the Ankur Scientific 
(India) gasifier. Most of the gasifiers fuel low cost engines that are replaced 
or substantially rebuilt after a year or two. Many generate electricity. Small 
systems run line shafts that power rice milling equipment. 

 

Tom     

 

From: Gasification [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Greg Manning
Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2017 8:57 AM
To: Discussion of biomass pyrolysis and gasification 
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Gasification] Straw Fueled CHP

 

Greetings Doug and list, 

 

I hope all is as well as can be as we all age like fine wine. 

 

In the interest of the original post about straw gasification, I am going to 
attempt a sample run in my latest unit out of curiosity, I think going the 
route of cubed wheat straw would be the way to go, what are your thoughts on 
this ?

 

Greg Manning

 

 


 
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On Mon, Dec 25, 2017 at 12:36 PM, Doug <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Hi Gasification Colleagues,

As each year passes, watching requests for proven gasification technology, is 
like watching the movie "National Ground Hogs Day" where the main character 
relives the same day over and over gradually correcting his mistakes until he 
gets the outcome he targets (the girl of course).  There is enough collective 
experience already in the World to solve just about every permutation of waste 
biomass use, except how to handle it's huge volume in the place it where it 
grows, and for a price which must equate to practically nothing.

Yes we can as individuals make things that work for our own edification, but 
this does not translate to making it work on the scales required by those just 
discovering biomass conversion.  Far from being a cornucopia ( a Horn of 
Plenty) it's more the other way of working like a funnel, in which you have to 
literally stuff bulk $$$ first, then all the "free waste" that must reach the 
funnel without cost. But, we don't really give up do we?

It's always good to find and refer to what appear to be examples of proven 
technologies, but few can really meet their own predictions of reliability when 
put to scrutiny. Take a hard look before you part with your $$$.

This year, I rebuilt my Pioneer Class gasifier down the back shed while I can 
still see to weld, and visited the CalForests Biochar maker project in 
California in July to commission a hot pyrolysis gas suction system. We are 
still trying to stuff a forest into a funnel, so in an eye blink things can go 
crazy, a single raw chip is failure!  I will try to get the photo file up on 
the Fluidyne Archive albeit six months late shortly.

On the side, I still study and ponder what secrets still remain as applications 
for these differing chars,  and continue my other life  as a therapist, 
researching pain.

Best Wishes to you all for the Festive Season.

Doug Williams,

Fluidyne.  

 

 

 


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