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Gas If Ication

Gasification is a process that converts carbonaceous materials into syngas through high-temperature reactions with oxygen and/or steam, offering efficiency advantages over direct combustion. Various types of gasifiers exist, including updraft, downdraft, cross draft, fluidized bed, and entrained flow, each with distinct operational characteristics and suitability for different feedstocks. Plasma gasifiers utilize high-voltage currents to create high-temperature arcs for gasification, resulting in a glass-like inorganic residue.

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Rasagna Rayasam
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views13 pages

Gas If Ication

Gasification is a process that converts carbonaceous materials into syngas through high-temperature reactions with oxygen and/or steam, offering efficiency advantages over direct combustion. Various types of gasifiers exist, including updraft, downdraft, cross draft, fluidized bed, and entrained flow, each with distinct operational characteristics and suitability for different feedstocks. Plasma gasifiers utilize high-voltage currents to create high-temperature arcs for gasification, resulting in a glass-like inorganic residue.

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Rasagna Rayasam
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GASIFICATIO

N
• Gasification is a process that converts organic or fossil
fuel based carbonaceous materials into carbon monoxide, hydrogen and carbon dioxide.
This is achieved by reacting the material at high temperatures (>700 °C), without
combustion, with a controlled amount of oxygen and/or steam. The resulting gas mixture is
called syngas (from synthesis gas or synthetic gas) or producer gas and is itself a fuel.
• The advantage of gasification is that using the syngas is potentially more efficient than
direct combustion of the original fuel because it can be combusted at higher temperatures
or even in fuel cells, so that the thermodynamic upper limit to the efficiency defined by
Carnot's rule is higher or (in case of fuel cells) not applicable. Syngas may be burned
directly in gas engines, used to produce methanol and hydrogen, or converted via the
Fischer–Tropsch process into synthetic fuel. Gasification of fossil fuels is currently widely
used on industrial scales to generate electricity.
TYPES OF
GASIFIERS
• Gasifier equipments are generally classified as upward draft, downward draft and cross draft gasifiers,
based on the direction of air/oxygen flow in the equipment. It should be noted that there are types of
gasifier equipment which are different from types of gasification processes. Gasification processes
can be categorized into three groups: entrained flow, fluidized bed and moving bed (sometimes called,
somewhat erroneously, fixed bed).
• In gasifier Fuel Interacts with air or Oxygen and steam. So the gasifier are classified according to the
way air or oxygen is introduced in it. On a bigger scale there are following four type of gasifiers.
• The choice of the one type of gasifier over there is mostly determined by the fuel, its final available
form, its size , moisture content and ash content. First three type of gasifiers are mostly used
in entrained bed gasification process and moving bed gasification process. While the last one
is fluidized bed gasification process.
UPWARD DRAFT OR COUNTER-CURRENT
GASIFIER
• This one is oldest and simplest type of gasifier. The air comes in at the bottom and produced syn gas
leaves from the top of the gasifier. Near the grate at the bottom combustion reaction occurs, above
that reduction reaction occurs. In the upper part of the gasifier heating and pyrolysis of the feedstock
occurs as a result of heat transfer by forced convention and radiation from the lower zones. Tars and
volatile produce produced during the reaction will leave along with the syn gas at the top of the
gasifier. Which will be later separated by use of cyclone and candle filter.
• The major advantages of this type of gasifier are its simplicity, high charcoal burn out and internal heat
exchange leading to low temperature of exit gas and high equipment efficiency. This gasifier can work
with several kind of feedstock ranging from Coal to Biomass.
• Major drawbacks result from the possibility of "channeling" in the equipment, which can lead to
oxygen break-through and dangerous, explosive situations and the necessity to install automatic
moving grate.
DOWNDRAFT OR CO-CURRENT GASIFIER

• In updraft gasifier there is a problem of tar entrainment in the product gas leaving stream. A solution is to have primary
gasification air introduced at or above the oxidation zone in the gasifier. The produced gas is taken out from the bottom.
• On their way down, the acid and tarry distillation products from the fuel must pass through a glowing bed of charcoal and
therefore are converted into permanent gases hydrogen, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and methane.
• Main advantage of downdraft gasifier lies in the possibility of producing tar free gas for engine operation. However in practice
very rarely tar free gas is produced but the % of tar leaving in product stream is considerably lower than leaving through the
updraft gasifier.
• Main disadvantage is that downdraft gasifier cannot be operated with range of different feedstocks. Low density feedstock
gives rise to flow problems and excessive pressure drop. High ash content coal also gives more problem with this kind of
gasifier than updraft gasifier.
• Other disadvantage is it gives lower efficiency, since there is no provision internal heat exchange compare to updraft
gasifier. The product stream also has low calorific value.
CROSS DRAFT GASIFIER

• Although cross draft gasifiers have certain advantages over updraft and downdraft gasifiers,
they are not ideal. The disadvantages such as high exit gas temperature, poor CO2
reduction and high gas velocity are the consequences of the design. Unlike downdraft and
updraft gasifiers, the ash bin, fire and reduction zones in cross draft gasifiers are separate.
These design characteristics limit the type of fuel usage restricted to only low ash fuels such
as wood, charcoal and coke. The load following ability of cross draft gasifier is quite good
due to concentrated zones which operate at temperatures up to 12000C. Start up time (5-10
minutes) is much faster than that of downdraft and updraft units. The relatively higher
temperature in cross draft gas producer has an obvious effect on exit gas composition such
as high carbon monoxide and low hydrogen and methane content when dry fuel such as
charcoal is used. Cross draft gasifier operates well on dry air blast and dry fuel.
FLUIDIZED BED GASIFIER

• The operation of both up and downward draft gasifiers is influenced by the morphological, physical and chemical properties of
the fuel. Problems commonly encountered are: lack of bunker flow, slagging and extreme pressure drop over the gasifier.
• A new design to address all this difficulties is fluidized bed gasifier.
• Air is blown through a bed of solid particles at a sufficient velocity to keep these in a state of suspension. The bed is
originally externally heated and the feedstock is introduced as soon as a sufficiently high temperature is reached. The fuel
particles are introduced at the bottom of the reactor and almost instantaneously heated up to the bed temperature. As a
result of this treatment the fuel is pyrolysed very fast, resulting in a component mix with a relatively large amount of gaseous
material. Ash particles are also carried over the top of the reactor and have to be removed from the gas stream if the gas is
used in engine applications. To remove ash particles cyclone and candle filter are used.
• The major advantage of fluidized bed is processing of feedstock. This type of gasifier are mostly used for high ash coal
and biomass. Since temperature is below the ash softening temperature so handling of ash is relatively simple.
• Drawback of fluidized bed gasifiers is - high tar content in the produced syn gas.
ENTRAINED FLOW GASIFIER

• A dry pulverized solid, an atomized liquid fuel or a fuel slurry is gasified with oxygen in
co-current flow. The gasification reactions take place in a dense cloud of very fine
particles.
• The high temperatures and pressures also mean that a higher throughput can be achieved,
however thermal efficiency is somewhat lower as the gas must be cooled before it can be
cleaned with existing technology.
• A smaller fraction of the ash is produced either as a very fine dry fly ash or as a black
colored fly ash slurry. Some fuels, in particular certain types of biomasses, can form slag
that is corrosive for ceramic inner walls that serve to protect the gasifier outer wall.
PLASMA GASIFIER

In a plasma gasifier a high-voltage current is fed to a torch, creating a high-


temperature arc. The inorganic residue is retrieved as a glass-like substance

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