Production of Hydrogen from Biomass by Pyrolysis/Steam Reforming
2005; Springer Science+Business Media; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1007/0-306-46922-7_7
AutoresStefan Czernik, Richard J. French, Calvin J. Feik, E. Chornet,
Tópico(s)Catalysts for Methane Reforming
ResumoWe successfully demonstrated that hydrogen could be efficiently produced by catalytic steam reforming of carbohydrate-derived bio-oil fractions in a fluidized bed reactor using a commercial nickel-based catalyst. Greater steam excess than that used for natural gas reforming was necessary to minimize the formation of char and coke (or to gasify these carbonaceous solids) resulting from thermal decomposition of complex carbohydrate-derived compounds. At 850°C and a molar steam to carbon ratio of 9, the hydrogen yield was 90% of that possible for stoichiometric conversion during eight hours of the catalyst on-stream time. This yield could be 5–7% greater if a secondary water-gas shift reactor followed the reformer. Finally, coke deposits were efficiently removed from the catalyst by steam and carbon dioxide gasification, which restored the initial catalytic activity.
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