Like many of you, I have been in the chemical industry for many  years.   
It has been my experience that a gas became synthesis gas or  syn-gas after 
various treatment processes to prepare it to synthesize a  particular 
chemical.   Prior to preparing it for synthesizing it had  other names.   
 
Typically in the chemical/petrochemical industry it was prepared by  
reforming natural gas.   After reforming, it was called reformed  gas.   
Subsequently, the ratio of hydrogen to carbon monoxide was  adjusted (shifted) 
to the 
proper value for the particular product that was  being synthesized.  That 
gas was called shift gas.   The  next stage was to remove carbon dioxide.  
At that stage the gas was called  syngas, because it was then ready to be 
synthesized into the final  product.
 
In general terms, to synthesize methanol the ratio of hydrogen to carbon  
monoxide was approximately 2:1.  For synthetic natural gas it was 3:1 and  
for ammonia, there was almost no carbon monoxide, but there was some nitrogen, 
 in the ratio of 3 parts hydrogen to one part nitrogen.
 
Prior to the use of natural gas, coal gas (producer gas) was used after  
suitable preparation and with the use of oxygen.   Again it only  became 
synthesis gas prior to the final synthesis step.    Gas  that was used to 
produce 
hydrogen was never called synthesis gas 
 
In my book, synthesis gas is a gas that has been made ready for the final  
synthesis step into a particular chemical, regardless of what is was before 
i.e.  the gas is used to directly synthesize another chemical product.    
Wood gas is not synthesis gas, but it could become synthesis gas after  
appropriate treatment.    If a gas is cleaned and prepared for  burning in a 
kiln 
or a boiler, it is fuel gas regardless of composition.
 
My preference is to call it wood gas (Tom's term) since it is made  from 
wood or, if you want to be more generic it is biomass gas but not  bio-gas.  
As mentioned by others, the latter is usually used for gas that  has been 
produced by anaerobic digestion.   If you want to be  fancy call it xylogas.
 
If the term syn-gas is used in any other way, it becomes too  generic and 
wood gas would loose its sense of identity.   By some of  the definitions 
used in past correspondence, coal gas, biogas, SNG or even  ethylene could be 
called syn-gas.   Let's try to keep our identity by  choosing a descriptive 
name rather than devolving into a generic  descriptor.
 
There are some excellent descriptions of the various types of gases,  
including synthesis gas, producer gas, blue gas, carbureted water gas in the  
"Gas Engineer's Handbook", if anyone is interested
 
More fuel for the fire.
 
John 
 
 
Date: Wed, 29 Dec 2010 13:13:35 -0800
From: Bear Kaufmann  <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject:  [Gasification] A small literature review re: syngas
Message-ID:  <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain;  charset=UTF-8; format=flowed

I looked through some of the papers I have  on hand, and extracted the 
interesting parts as they relate to the latest  discussion, FWIW:

"Fuel gas can be used directly as fuel in gas burners  or internal 
combustion engines and gas turbines. Fuel gas, after  purification and 
possibly water gas shift to adjust the H2/CO ratio, can be  described as 
a syngas (a mixture of H2 and CO), which can be used to  manufacture 
methanol, ammonia, Fischer Tropsch liquids, or hydrogen for use  in fuel 
cells (4). The suitability for a particular usage, i.e. the fuel gas  
quality, is determined by the gas composition and the level of  
contamination by particulates, alkali compounds, nitrogen-containing  
components, sulphur and tars (5)."
from Kalisz, S. et al. Energy Balance  of High Temperature Air/Steam 
Gasification of Biomass in Up-Draft, Fixed-Bed  Type Gasifier. Int. Conf. 
on Incineration and Thermal Treatment  Technologies, Phoenix, Arizona 
(2004).at  
<http://gasunie.eldoc.ub.rug.nl/FILES/root/2004/3265200/3265200.pdf>

"Fast  pyrolyzers rapidly (?1 s) heat dry biomass (10% H2O) to ?500?C and 
thereby  thermally transform biomass into bio-oil (?60% of mass), syngas 
(?20% of  mass), and charcoal (?20% of mass). The energy required to 
operate a fast  pyrolyzer is ?15% of the total energy that can be derived 
from the dry  biomass. Modern systems are designed to use the syngas 
generated by the  pyro- lyzer to provide all the energy needs of the 
pyrolyzer."
from  Laird, D.A. The Charcoal Vision: A Win Win Win Scenario for 
Simultaneously  Producing Bioenergy, Permanently Sequestering Carbon, 
while Improving Soil  and Water Quality. Agron J 100, 178-181(2008).

"To improve the thermal  efficiency and predict the composition of 
syngas, several numeric models  have been developed for biomass 
conversion systems."
from Rogel, A. &  Aguill?n, J. The 2D Eulerian Approach of Entrained Flow 
and Temperature in a  Biomass Stratified Downdraft Gasifier. American 
Journal of Applied Sciences  3, 2068-2075(2006).
Comments: Shows a stratified downdraft model with inputs  of air and 
biomass, outputs of syngas and ashes

"The term ?pyrolysis?  is typically used either for ...[analytical 
purposes]... or for bioenergy  systems that capture the off-gases emitted 
during charring and used to  produce hydrogen, syngas, bio-oils, heat or 
electricity (Bridgwater et al,  1999)."
from Lehmann, J. & Joseph, S. Biochar for environmental  management: 
science and technology. (Earthscan/James & James:  2009).

"High purity syngas (i.e. low quantities of inerts such as N2) is  
extremely beneficial for fuels and chemicals synthesis since it  
substantially reduces the size and cost of downstream equipment.  
However, the guidelines provided in Table 5 should not be interpreted as  
stringent requirements. "
"There is more latitude with regard to syngas  composition for engine 
combustion than for turbine combustion."
"To be  considered interchangeable with conventional fossil fuels 
(natural gas or  distillate oils) and to ensure maximum flexibility for 
industrial or utility  applications, syngas heating value needs to be 
above 11 MJ/m3"
"At  temperatures greater than 1200-1300oC, little or no methane, higher  
hydrocarbons or tar is formed, and H2 and CO production is maximized  
without requiring a further conversion step."
"Biomass gasification is  the conversion of an organic...carbonaceous 
feedstock by partial oxidation  into a gaseous product, synthesis gas or 
?syngas,? consisting primarily of  [H2 and CO] with lesser amounts of 
[CO2, CH4], higher hydrocarbons (C2+),  and nitrogen (N2). The reactions 
are carried out at elevated temperatures,  500-1400oC, and atmospheric or 
elevated pressures up to 33 bar (480 psia).  The oxidant used can be air, 
pure oxygen, steam or a mixture of these gases.  Air-based gasifiers 
typically produce a product gas containing a relatively  high 
concentration of nitrogen with a low heating value between 4 and 6  MJ/m3 
(107-161 Btu/ft3). Oxygen and steam-based gasifiers produce a product  
gas containing a relatively high concentration of hydrogen and CO with a  
heating value between 10 and 20 MJ/m3 (268-537 Btu/ft3)."
"Table 8.  Compositions of Biomass-Derived Syngas" - includes N2 from 
0-56%, H2 from  5-43.3%, CO from 9-67%, CO2 from 4-40%
...
from Ciferno, J.P. &  Marano, J.J. Benchmarking biomass gasification 
technologies for fuels,  chemicals and hydrogen production. US Dep of 
Energy NETL (2002).at  
<http://seca.doe.gov/technologies/coalpower/gasification/pubs/pdf/BMassGasFi
nal.pdf>

"The  resulting fuel is a producer gas (a synthesis gas or syngas) that 
consists  primarily of varying ratios of hydrogen and carbon monoxide (CO)."
from  Mukhtar, S. Manure to Energy: Understanding Processes, Principles 
and  Jargon. (2006).at  
<http://repository.tamu.edu/bitstream/handle/1969.1/87462/pdf_2425.pdf?seque
nce=1>

In  short, the usage from the above doesn't appear entirely clear.
But in  general, syngas is often suggested to have been upgraded, or of a 
higher  CO/H2/energy content. Syngas is often used to refer to gas 
intended to be  used for synthesis of products. Syngas does also seem to 
be used as general  term in some cases.

My preferred usage has been to call the gas the  air-blown GEK makes 
"producer gas". Wood gas notes that the carbon source  was biomass, 
though I don't prefer the term. "Syngas" being made with O2 or  steam.
The problem with the above is it doesn't leave a general catch-all  term.

Cheers,
Bear Kaufmann
All Power  Labs

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