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Thursday, August 09, 2007

Smaller, Cheaper Biofuel Reactors

A new catalytic process efficiently converts biomass to syngas.

By Kevin Bullis

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Red-hot catalyst: A catalyst bed glows as it converts millimeter-sized particles of cellulose (white) into a valuable mixture of gases.
Credit: Lanny Schmidt/University of Minnesota

Researchers at the University of Minnesota have developed a fast way to convert sawdust and waste biomass directly into a mixture of gases that can be burned to generate electricity or made into liquid fuels such as diesel. If the process can be scaled up, it could be a more energy-efficient method for making biofuels by allowing for small, fast reactors located close to biomass sources.

The researchers developed a system that makes it possible to transform solids directly into a useful mixture of gases. The process begins when millimeter-sized particles come into contact with a 700 to 800 degree Celsius porous surface and instantly form a mixture of gaseous compounds. These interact with a catalyst made of the precious metal rhodium that facilitates partial oxidation reactions that both keep the system hot and convert the gases to hydrogen and carbon monoxide. This mixture of gases, called syngas or synthesis gas, can then be burned in a gas turbine to make electricity, or purified and made into a number of different fuels using well-known processes.

The key to the new process is a catalyst bed with the right kind of porous structure to maintain the temperatures and movement of materials needed for the chemical reactions. The resulting system breaks down the biomass in just 70 milliseconds. That is ten times faster than other methods for making syngas, says Lanny Schmidt, professor of chemical engineering and materials science at the University of Minnesota. Ideally, that means a reactor with a given volume could make ten times the amount of syngas using the new method than it could using conventional methods. Or put another way, it could allow for reactors one-tenth the size, he says.

The catalytic approach is one of a number of methods in development that could convert cheap sources of cellulosic biomass, such as sawdust, grass, and agricultural waste, into liquid fuels. It's still not clear which of two broad categories of approaches will be more practical, thermochemical methods, such as Schmidt's, or methods that use enzymes and organisms. Thermochemical methods are expensive but have the potential advantage of being able to use a number of different source materials, whereas biological systems will likely need to be fine-tuned for particular feedstocks.

But the ability to make smaller reactors for converting waste biomass to syngas could help meet one of the most significant challenges of producing fuels from biomass. Transporting bulky materials such as wood chips and corn waste long distances to central facilities uses a lot of energy, often in the form of fossil fuels. It also makes the overall process more expensive. Small, distributed syngas plants could cut down on these transportation costs by decreasing the distance the biomass has to be shipped. Distributed reactors could also be valuable in developing economies, Schmidt says, providing power and fuel to communities that don't have reliable transportation infrastructure.

The overall affordability of such a system will partly depend on whether rhodium, which can cost upwards of $6,000 an ounce, can be used in small enough amounts--and over long enough periods of time. The process also has to be scaled up, even for small distributed systems. Right now, the prototype uses an experimental catalyst bed the size of a person's thumb. The researchers estimate that a system that can make enough syngas to produce 10 gallons of gasoline a day would require a catalyst bed many times this size, about 15 centimeters across and 3 deep. It could prove difficult, says Theodore Krause, head of basic and applied sciences at Argonne National Laboratory, to make a larger system that remains fast and efficient.

While challenges remain, Schmidt's system represents a distinct advance in the science of making fuels from biomass, Krause says. In demonstrating the ability to convert solids directly into syngas, he adds, the research has "demonstrated something that most people would have at first guessed was not possible."

Comments

  • small syngas generator
    VCRAGAIN on 08/09/2007 at 7:31 AM
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    10 gallons a day is all most of us need !!
    just build me one and I will figure out how to feed it, I have space in my garden (:>)
    joking aside, all it needs now is a replacement for the expensive rhodium ??
    I'm watching and waiting - wonderful to see all this research and development going on, I believe we are on the road to something really good. What happens to the Middle East when they suddenly don't have oil profits (:>) - gives me a very smug feeling !!
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: small syngas generator
      djs on 08/09/2007 at 8:42 AM
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      For your 10 gallons a day you'll need some 300 - 400 lb of sawdust a day (with smaller than 1 mm particle size). Good luck.
      Rate this comment: 12345
      • Re: small syngas generator
        aymeric on 08/09/2007 at 11:21 AM
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        Where do you get those numbers???
        Rate this comment: 12345
        • Re: small syngas generator
          djs on 08/13/2007 at 3:21 AM
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          Your 10 gallons are almost 40 kg of hydrocarbon, to be made (at some 50 % overall stoichiometric efficiency - think of burning part of your stuff to generate the high heat and don't forget having to dry the very wet biomass) from about 80 kg of carbon which sits in about 200 kg of carbohydrate, which sits in about 400 kg of biomass (the rest being water)
          Rate this comment: 12345
      • Re: small syngas generator
        VCRAGAIN on 08/09/2007 at 12:31 PM
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        ah spoilsport - I was going to just cut my grass and throw it in - if that isn't going to work - why not ??
        That's where we have to go - an instant conversion machine that takes in the sewage and everything we dont want and converts it into what we do want, via bio-conversion bacteria, this technique and all the other methods popping up - just go to it guys  (:->)
        It will be like a recycling machine - possible - of course - I can think it therefore it can be !!
        Rate this comment: 12345
        • Conversion machines
          dmm on 08/09/2007 at 2:09 PM
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          You want "an instant conversion machine that takes in the sewage and everything we dont want and converts it into what we do want."  We have that already, except it isn't instant -- it's called a compost pile.  All we have to do is centralize it and industrialize it so we can capture the outgassings.  Burn the outgassings to make electricity, and use the solid leftovers as fertilizer (instead of making fertilizer from crude oil).
          Rate this comment: 12345
          • Re: Conversion machines
            crisrich on 08/09/2007 at 5:40 PM
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            Here“s a website about such a machine: www.kompogas.ch/en/
            Rate this comment: 12345
            • Re: Conversion machines
              VCRAGAIN on 08/10/2007 at 8:04 AM
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              Trust the Swiss to get it together !
              (I'm half Swiss so I'm very happy to see this )
              Now all we want is the small residential version
              for independant types like me !
              thanks for the link - I'll add it to my "watcvh this science" folder
              Rate this comment: 12345
  • Syngas to gasoline
    brown.ritter on 08/09/2007 at 2:42 PM
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    How does this unit produce gasoline from syngas?
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: Syngas to gasoline
      kumsaen on 08/10/2007 at 5:34 AM
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      The well known Fischer-Tropsch process converts syn gas to liquid oil.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fischer-Tropsch

      By the way,it is not a simple process. You need a sophisticated petrochemical plant in your back yard. :)

      A long way to go.
      Rate this comment: 12345
  • SunDiesel made by Choren!
    Greg on 08/10/2007 at 12:21 PM
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    Hi guys!
    In Germany we have a company called "Choren" which is developing this process already since a lot of years very successfully.
    They actually are construction their first commercial BTL plant to produce 15000 t/year of diesel!
    Pleas have a look at for lots of information:
    http://www.choren.com/en/
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • $6,000 / ounce rhodium too expensive
    nekote on 08/10/2007 at 3:13 PM
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    Prof. Lanny Schmidt certainly is to be commended for this and the ethanol to H2 reactor.
    But, at $6,000 per ounce for the rhodium catalyst, it would seem to be only for a laboratory / highly specialized application, rather than something commercial or industrial.

    How does the rhodium accomplish its catalytical magic?
    How to design / create a cost effective version?
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: $6,000 / ounce rhodium too expensive
      seilertechco on 08/16/2007 at 10:09 AM
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      I'm working on a two stage system using clay based ceramics. I call it "prosyn" gas as it is both producer and syngas.  E-mail me at seilertechco@yahoo.com for off list discussion.
      Rate this comment: 12345
  • w2energy plasma reactor........
    DJTal on 09/29/2007 at 10:13 AM
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    w2energy , a start up company with technological backing from Drexel university plasma institute have created a new type of plasma gasifier which can process small particles of biomass or fossil fuel . The plasma acts as a catalyst so there is no need for an expensive and potentially toxic solid metal catalyst . It's called the Gliding Arc in Tornado reactor (GAT) .
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: w2energy plasma reactor........
      ZJ on 06/03/2008 at 8:22 PM
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      Is there any pilot plant in order to produce Biodiesel from Biomass (also called BTL) using the Gliding Arc in Tornado Reactor.
      Rate this comment: 12345
  • Challenges
    balajit on 11/29/2007 at 10:00 AM
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    Since the production of syngas from biomass is endothermic, the catalyst bed will soon cool down unless supplied with energy to maintain its temperature. We are back to autothermal reformation of biomass as the cheapest and sustainable method. Besides, I suspect this is a very expensive method, considering catalyst cost and regeneration. This problem has been attacked by many groups intensively in the last decade. One proven solution is the production of N2 diluted syngas or producer gas from biomass by open top downdraft gasification (IISc technology) which has been commercialised in 10 kg/h to 2000 kg/h throughput with large systems having clocked > 30,000 hours in 24 x 7 operation for industry.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: Challenges
      DJTal on 12/09/2007 at 9:35 AM
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      There is no expensive catalyst cost when using a gliding arc in a tornado reactor (GAT) . The plasma itself acts as a catalyst . The electrical input is only 2-3% of the energy required by the reactor , which easily come from solar , hydro or wind etc.
      Rate this comment: 12345
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