International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, Vol.45, No.22, 12283-12297, 2020
Numerical simulation on biomass-pyrolysis and thermal cracking of condensable volatile component
We studied the physical and chemical properties of the condensable volatiles of biomass pyrolysis products. We redefine the liquid product and divide the condensable volatiles into two categories, biomass oil and tar, the latter of which comes from the secondary pyrolysis or cracking reaction of the former. We further establish a kinetic model of biomass pyrolysis and secondary cracking. The chemical reaction kinetics equation and heat transfer equation are coupled to simulate the biomass pyrolysis process. For biomass solid particles, the model not only considers the initial reaction of biomass and secondary cleavage reaction of condensable gas, but also introduces a reaction mode in which biomass oil is converted into tar. When the pyrolysis temperature is below 500 degrees C, the pyrolysis products are essentially biomass oil. However, when the pyrolysis temperature exceeds 500 degrees C, the biomass oil gradually converts into tar. The model also considers characteristics of the reaction medium (porosity, intrinsic permeability, thermal conductivity) and the unsteady gas phase process based on Darcy's law of velocity and pressure, heat convection, diffusion, and radiation transfer. We analyze the relationships among the internal temperature of the particles, particle size and position, mass fraction of the reactants and products, the gas mixture, the production share of tar and biomass oil, and the relationship between gas pressure and time. The results show that the effects of the secondary cracking reaction and internal convective flow in the biomass pyrolysis process are coupled because the flow field in the porous medium determines the volatile residence time and thus species that affect the secondary cracking reaction. The rate of volatile formation in the initial and secondary cracking reactions affects the pressure gradient and gas diffusion. Additionally, the endothermic effect influences the temperature field of the pyrolysis reaction but has no apparent effect on small particles whose chemical reaction is the control mechanism. For large particles, heat transfer inside the particles is the diffusion control mechanism and the chemical reaction on the particle surface is the speed control mechanism. Two peaks are observed in the pyrolysis gas mass proportion curve, which result from the consumption of biomass oil and tar as they flow toward hot surfaces. The first peak is the decomposition of biomass oil into non-condensable volatile matter and tar, and the second peak is the further cracking of tar into gas and coke at high temperature. (C) 2020 Hydrogen Energy Publications LLC. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.