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Agenda 1.Quiz on Chapter 4 (5% added to Test 1) 2.Discuss anaerobic digestion and gasification 3.Watch video(s) on “Future of Bioenergy” 4.Example on gaseous.

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Presentation on theme: "Agenda 1.Quiz on Chapter 4 (5% added to Test 1) 2.Discuss anaerobic digestion and gasification 3.Watch video(s) on “Future of Bioenergy” 4.Example on gaseous."— Presentation transcript:

1 Agenda 1.Quiz on Chapter 4 (5% added to Test 1) 2.Discuss anaerobic digestion and gasification 3.Watch video(s) on “Future of Bioenergy” 4.Example on gaseous biofuel calcs Announcement: No Class on Wed., Sept. 22

2 Question 1 List the two categories of bioenergy sources, as described by the author. Question 2 According to the Author, “producer gas” from thermochemical gasification results primarily in _________ and ________ with smaller amounts of __________, _________ and _________.

3 Question 3 List the four ways that liquid fuels can be produced from biomass, as described by the author. Question 4 The most commonly used process to transform syngas into liquid fuels using catalysts is called. __________-_________

4 Question 5 Plot the concentration of the following gases coming from a landfill vs. time. Use these symbols: O2 = Solid Line N2 = Dotted line H2 = Dashed Line CO2 = X’s CH4 = O’s

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6 ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔✔

7 Gaseous Fuels Gasification of Biomass/Waste (Thermophysical) Fixed Bed Fluidized Bed Entrained Flow Plasma Arc Anaerobic Digestion (Biochemical) Landfill Gas Manure Digesters Accelerated Digestion of other Wastes

8 Anaerobic Digestion Microorganisms break down organic matter in absence of oxygen - Breaks carbohydrates into sugars - Then sugars into CO 2, ammonia, hydrogen, and eventually methane Figure courtesy of Alex Marshall, Clarke Energy.

9 Anaerobic Digestion Overall Reaction Something Like… C 6 H 12 O 6  3 CO 2 + 3 CH 4 Wide range of input feedstocks (manure, MSW, etc) Batch or continuous process Single or multi-stage Residence times 2-6 weeks Product gas composition varies drastically CH 4, CO 2, N 2, H 2, etc.

10 A Dairy Digester

11 Landfill Gas (Yolo County)

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13 Gasification Typically a partial oxidation process (ϕ>3, 1000 K) - Heat from reaction breaks molecular bonds - Insufficient oxygen to complete reaction - Often, steam is used as well - Major products = CO, H 2, solid residue Gas mixture produced is called “syngas” Syngas can be burned for heat, power an engine Higher temperatures and cleaner burning solid fuel

14 Zones of a Gasifier Drying – Biomass is dryed Pyrolysis or Distillation Biomass heated by gases and radiation Chemical reactions due to temp, no oxygen Biomass turns to gas, char Reduction – Reactions (CO2, H2O, H2, CO) Hearth (Combustion) – Char burned to produce heat, CO2 and H20 for reduction zone

15 Counter Current (Up-Draft) Gasifier

16 Co-Current (Down-Draft) Gasifier

17 Fluidized Bed Gasifier

18 Other Processes Carbonization – Like pyrolysis (no oxygen), creates carbon residue from biomass, gas given off Aerobic Decomposition – Composting. Could be used for heat, low temperatures Solid Biomass Combustion – Not hard, not clean

19 ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔✔ ✔✔ ✔ ✔ ✔✔ ✔ ✔✔

20 ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔✔ ✔✔ ✔ ✔ ✔✔ ✔ ✔✔ ✔

21 The Future of Biofuels Potentially new pathways… Any source  Gasification  Reforming  Fuels

22 The Future of Biofuels

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