Publication | Closed Access
Release of chlorine from biomass at gasification conditions
18
Citations
0
References
1997
Year
Biomass UtilizationSub 2Chemical EngineeringBiomass ConversionHigher Chlorine ReleaseBioenergyGas ConversionEngineeringEnvironmental EngineeringGasificationCarbonizationBiogasBiomass ResourceGasification ConditionsChlorine ReleaseWaste ManagementWastewater Treatment
The objective of the project was to investigate the influence of different gasifying atmospheres on the release of chlorine from biomass during gasification conditions. Furthermore, the purpose was also to try and identify the formed chloro compounds. The results showed that O{sub 2}, H{sub 2}O and CO{sub 2} had negligible effect on the chlorine release at temperatures under 700 deg C. At temperatures above 800 deg C the reactivity towards CO{sub 2} increased and could be seen as higher chlorine release and less solid residue. No chloro organic compounds (aliphatic one to six carbons or aromatic one to two rings) could be detected in the tar or the fuel gas produced during pyrolysis/gasifying. On the other hand, comparable amounts of chlorinated benzenes were found in the cooling section during combustion of lucerne and of synthetic waste, indicating that oxygen is essential for chlorination reactions. 11 refs, 4 figs, 1 tab