Fuel Processing Technology, Vol.92, No.3, 563-569, 2011
Biomass to hydrogen via catalytic steam reforming of bio-oil over Ni-supported alumina catalysts
Production of hydrogen (H-2) from catalytic steam reforming of bio-oil was investigated in a fixed bed tubular flow reactor over nickel/alumina (Ni/Al2O3) supported catalysts at different conditions. The features of the steam reforming of bio-oil, including the effects of metal content, reaction temperature, WbHSV (defined as the mass flow rate of bio-oil per mass of catalyst) and S/C ratio (the molar ratio of steam to carbon fed) on the hydrogen yield were investigated. Carbon conversion (moles of carbon in the outlet gases to moles of the carbon feed) was also studied, and the outlet gas distributions were obtained. It was revealed that the Al2O3 with 14.1% Ni content gave the highest yield of hydrogen (73%) among the catalysts tested, and the best carbon conversion was 79% under the steam reforming conditions of S/C = 5, WbHSV = 13 1/h and temperature = 950 degrees C. The H-2 yield increased with increasing temperature and decreasing WbHSV: whereas the effect of the S/C ratio was less pronounced. In the S/C ratio range of 1 to 2, the hydrogen yield was slightly increased, but when the S/C ratio was increased further, it did not have an effect on the H-2 production yield. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.