No body use the biochar that we produce here everyday and it become waste that 
harm the environtment. 


Terkirim dari Samsung Mobile

-------- Original message --------
From: Tom Reed <[email protected]> 
Date: 06/02/2014  04:37  (GMT+07:00) 
To: Discussion of biomass pyrolysis and gasification 
<[email protected]> 
Subject: [Gasification] Cellulose Gas and Biochar option 
 
Dear Tom Miles and all

WWII gasification converted all the fuel into a low quality (150Btu/scf) gas 
that required considerable cleanup. Before use in engines. 

Now that we recognize the value of biochar as 

O. A soil amendment

O. Reducing global warming

a second option is more attractive.

In the TLUD stove and larger (eg 33 gal garbage can) only the cellulose burns, 
giving a cleaner gas

C6H10O5 + 1/2 O2 ===>
6O +  5 H2

Plus. biochar for addition to the soil. 

Comments???

Tom Reed


From Tom Reed

AKA

Dr Thomas B Reed
508 353 7841
Www.Thomas Reed Inventions .com
[email protected]

On Feb 5, 2014, at 4:15 PM, "Tom Miles" <[email protected]> wrote:

PERFORMANCE STUDIES ON DOWNDRAFT GASIFIER WITH BIOMASS ENERGY SOURCES AVAILABLE 
IN REMOTE VILLAGES
V. ChristusJeya Singh, S. Joseph Sekhar and K. Thyagarajan
DOI : 10.3844/ajassp.2014.611.622
American Journal of Applied Sciences
Volume 11, Issue 4
Pages 611-622
Abstract
Increasing global concern over the environmental issues and depletion of fossil 
fuels, significant interest has been shown by the researchers to develop 
alternate energy technologies like biomass, biogas, solar to meet the future 
energy demand. The prediction of the performance of different biomass energy 
sources in gasifiers is needed for the implementation of this technology to 
fulfil the need of decentralized heat and power applications, relevant to 
remote villages. This study presents the theoretical and experimental studies 
conducted on a 50 kW downdraft biomass gasifier with various biomass materials 
such as wood, coconut shell, rubber seed kernel and coir pith which are 
generally available in villages. Two-zone kinetic equilibrium model approach is 
used to predict the composition and temperature of the producer gas. The 
influence of equivalence ratio on the reaction temperature, quality of producer 
gas and gasifier conversion efficiency are discussed. The experimental and 
theoretical studies show that the rubber seed kernel can be effectively used as 
a feedstock of the biomass gasifier to meet the rural energy demand.
Singh, V.C., S.J. Sekhar and K. Thyagarajan, 2014. Performance studies on 
downdraft gasifier with biomass energy sources available in remote villages. 
Am. J. Applied Sci., 11: 611-622.
http://thescipub.com/abstract/10.3844/ajassp.2014.611.622
 
 
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