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Production of biohydrogen from gasification of waste fuels: Pilot plant results and deployment prospects.

TLDR
Work undertaken to design a commercial Waste-to-Hydrogen (WtH2) plant is summarized, which includes an assessment of future markets for hydrogen, the identification of an appropriate scale for the plants, and development of specifications for process design and output streams.
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This article is published in Waste Management.The article was published on 2019-07-01 and is currently open access. It has received 24 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Pilot plant & Refuse-derived fuel.

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Industrial decarbonization via hydrogen: A critical and systematic review of developments, socio-technical systems and policy options

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the full range of industries and industrial processes for which hydrogen can support decarbonization and the technical, economic, social and political factors that will impact hydrogen adoption.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasma gasification of municipal solid waste for waste-to-value processing

TL;DR: In this article, the current status of plasma gasification for waste-to-value processing is reviewed and compared in terms of cost, service life, energy comparison, and environmental impact comparison.
Journal ArticleDOI

A critical review on the principles, applications, and challenges of waste-to-hydrogen technologies

TL;DR: In this article, the potential of waste as a source of hydrogen production via various thermochemical (gasification and pyrolysis) and biochemical (fermentation and photolysis).
Journal ArticleDOI

Co-gasification of refused derived fuel and biomass in a pilot-scale bubbling fluidized bed reactor

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of the process operating parameters, namely average bed temperature between 785 and 829 °C, equivalence ratio between 0.21 and 0.36 and refused derived fuel weight percentage in the fuel mixture (0, 10, 20, 50 and 100 ǫ), was analyzed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Waste to biogas through anaerobic digestion: Hydrogen production potential in the developing world - A case of Bangladesh

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the hydrogen production potential from waste in the developing world, particularly focusing on Bangladesh, and found that anaerobic digestion is the most suitable waste management technology for the developing countries mainly due to waste's composition.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Complete removal of carbon monoxide in hydrogen-rich gas stream through methanation over supported metal catalysts

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of catalytic supports on methanation of CO could be explained by particles sizes of Ni and Ru metal, while Ni metal particles with relatively larger diameters were effective for the reaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Review of the Water Gas Shift Reaction Kinetics

TL;DR: A critical review of the developments in the modeling approaches of the reaction for use in designing and simulating the water gas shift reactor is presented in this article, where the authors provide a consolidated listing of the various important kinetic expressions published for both the high temperature and the low temperature Water gas shift reaction along with the details of the catalysts and the operating conditions at which they have been validated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Life cycle assessment of CO2 capture and utilization: a tutorial review

TL;DR: This tutorial review gives a jargon-free introduction of LCA of CCU directed at LCA novices and an outlook is given on recent developments in LCA that aim to cover all pillars of sustainability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomass gasification gas cleaning for downstream applications: A comparative critical review

TL;DR: In this paper, the advantages and disadvantages of different gas cleaning methods are critically discussed and concluded that the catalytic hot gas cleaning with highly efficient catalyst is the most viable options for large-scale production of clean producer gas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biofuels production by biomass gasification: A review

TL;DR: A review of the predominant biomass gasification technologies and biofuels obtained from syngas by bio-dieselification can be found in this article, where the authors present a review of these technologies.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (19)
Q1. What have the authors contributed in "Production of biohydrogen from gasification of waste fuels: pilot plant results and deployment prospects" ?

This paper summarises work undertaken to design a commercial Waste-to-Hydrogen ( WtH2 ) plant, which includes an assessment of future markets for hydrogen, the identification of an appropriate scale for the plants, and development of specifications for process design and output streams. 

The H2:CO ratio is important for further hydrogen separation, as low values are likely to cause low bioH2 yield and high CO2 generation during water gas shift. 

Close to 100% CO conversion could be achieved with higher Nickel catalyst (40-50% wt.) active at lower temperatures (180-200 ˚C), or by removing the bulk of CO2 upstream. 

Pressure swing adsorption (PSA) is commonly employed to achieve the 99.95% purity required for use in fuel cells (Asgari et al., 2014). 

Typical cleaning system for small scale (<100 MW) waste based plants includes tar reforming systems, dry filters (incorporating a ceramic filter unit with chemical sorbents dosing), and alkaline wet scrubbers (Zwart, 2009). 

Because of the small-scale of the plant, heat losses necessitated the use of electric blankets around reactors to ensure components were maintained at sufficient temperature. 

shifting completely to hydrogen offers a longer-term opportunity for bioH2 because it offers far greater carbon savings than SMR hydrogen. 

The biggest obstacle when using these sources as feedstock is the utilization of land and clean water to produce energy crops instead of food production. 

The key element for a consistent quantity of bioH2 is the production of a high quality syngas very rich in hydrogen, and suitable for catalytic processing. 

Several other separation technologies could be considered, including membrane separation, physical solvents and amine systems (Granite and O’Brien, 2005; Adhikari and Fernando, 2006; Barelli et al., 2008; Shokrollahi et al., 2016). 

In order to deliver sufficient pure oxygen without getting to high temperature, oxygen/steam mixtures are typically used in practical applications. 

Due to their flexibility and robustness, fluidised beds are instead more suitable for small applications and for treating gross and heterogeneous feedstock (Materazzi and Lettieri, 2017b; Arena and DiGregorio, 2016). 

In recent years hydrogen has received increasing attention as a potential fuel that could be produced from non-fossil fuel sources (Hart et al., 2015; Barisano et al., 2017; Ogden, 2018), both because it can be generated with low greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions, and because it generates no emissions at the point of use. 

Assuming a commercial electrolyser efficiency to be 50 kWh/kg H2, and the same CO2 emissions associated to use of electricity, approximately 220 kg of CO2 equivalent are emitted per MWh of hydrogen produced, as also shown in (Bertuccioli et al., 2014). 

The work has confirmed that the combination of steam-oxygen fluidised bed gasification and plasma refining delivers a high quality raw gas with very low levels of contaminants, while dealing at the same time with the increased amount of ashes by producing a vitrified inert product. 

Combined flow of gas through the reactor was sufficient to give a GHSV of between 5000 and 11000 h-1.Symmetrical trends of CO and CO2 were observed in the first HTS reactor reflecting the occurrence of water gas shift as the dominating reaction from temperatures above 250°C (Figure 3). 

It is concluded, therefore, that for the examined catalysts the most appropriate reaction condition is a H2O:CO molar ratio of approximately 2.4.2. 

Luberti et al. (Luberti et al., 2014) have shown that hydrogen recovery can reach a maximum of 93 % with a Polybed H2 PSA system having twelve columns. 

This is because, as for other thermochemical plants, a WtH2 plant has relatively high capital costs but operating costs are subsidised by the waste gate fees.