Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, Vol.35, No.8, 2522-2530, 1996
Carbon-Catalyzed Gasification of Organic Feedstocks in Supercritical Water
Spruce wood charcoal, macadamia shell charcoal, coal activated carbon, and coconut shell activated carbon catalyze the gasification of organic compounds in supercritical water. Feedstocks studied in this paper include glycerol, glucose, cellobiose, whole biomass feedstocks (depithed bagasse liquid extract and sewage sludge), and representative Department of Defense (DoD) wastes (methanol, methyl ethyl ketone, ethylene glycol, acetic acid, and phenol). The effects of temperature, pressure, reactant concentration, weight hourly space velocity, and the type of catalyst on the gasification of glucose are reported. Complete conversion of glucose (22% by weight in water) to a hydrogen-rich synthesis gas was realized at a weight hourly space velocity (WHSV) of 22.2 h(-1) in supercritical water at 600 degrees C, 34.5 MPa. Complete conversions of the whole biomass feeds were also achieved at the same temperature and pressure. The destruction efficiencies for the representative DoD wastes were also high. Deactivation of the carbon catalyst was observed after 4 h of operation without swirl in the entrance region of the reactor, but the carbon gasification efficiency remained near 100% for more than 6 h when a swirl generator was employed in the entrance of the reactor.
Keywords:PRESSURE AQUEOUS ENVIRONMENTS;GAS-PHASE PYROLYSIS;HIGH-TEMPERATURE;ANALYTICAL METHODOLOGY;BIOMASS PRETREATMENT;OXIDATION-KINETICS;PHENOL OXIDATION;ACETIC-ACID;KETOSES;ALDOSES