Biomedical Engineering Reference
In-Depth Information
Biomass inc
Raw syngas
Air or oxygen feed
Plasma torch
Slag
FIGURE 8.19 Plasma gasification of solid waste.
4500 C). The downstream temperature is still suffi-
ciently high, however, to pyrolyze complex hydrocarbons into simple gases
such as CO and H 2 . Simultaneously, all inorganic components (e.g., glass,
metals, silicates, and heavy metals) are fused into a volcanic-type lava,
which after cooling forms an inert basaltic slag. The product gas leaves the
gasifier at very high temperatures (1000
it, is much lower (2700
1200 C).
A typical plasma reactor provides exceptionally high temperature that
cause the tar products to be cracked and harmful products like dioxin and
furan to be destroyed.
Owing to the high reactor temperature and the presence of chlorine in
wastes, the life of the reactor liner is an issue. However, an attractive feature
is that plasma gasification is relatively insensitive to the quality of the feed-
stock. This is the result of an independent energy source run by electricity
instead of partial combustion of the gasification product.
8.6 PROCESS DESIGN
The design of a gasifier involves both process and hardware. The process
design gives the type and yield of the product, operating conditions, and
the basic size of
the reactor. The hardware design involves structural
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