enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Top-lit updraft gasifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top-lit_updraft_gasifier

    Any biomass with less than 20% water content can be used as fuel. The user fills the fuel pot up to the neck, just below the secondary air inlet holes. The user ignites the top layer of fuel for the pyrolysis to start. Air then flows in through the primary and secondary air inlets. The primary inlet helps the draft of pyrolysed wood gas flow up.

  3. Wood gas generator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_gas_generator

    Dodge V10 hauling hay with woodgas.Keith gasifier system Santa-Go, Kanagawa Chuo Kotsu Co., Ltd.. A wood gas generator is a gasification unit which converts timber or charcoal into wood gas, a producer gas consisting of atmospheric nitrogen, carbon monoxide, hydrogen, traces of methane, and other gases, which – after cooling and filtering – can then be used to power an internal combustion ...

  4. Integrated gasification fuel cell cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrated_Gasification...

    Multiple types of solid fuel gasifiers are commercially available for coal, petcoke, and biomass gasification.Designs vary depending on fuel and intended application. As a result, they can differ in the composition of the syngas produced and the efficiency with which they convert coal energy content to syngas energy content - a performance parameter typically termed cold gas efficiency. [3]

  5. Gasification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gasification

    Since 2008 in Svenljunga, Sweden, a biomass gasification plant generates up to 14 MW th, supplying industries and citizens of Svenljunga with process steam and district heating, respectively. The gasifier uses biomass fuels such as CCA or creosote impregnated waste wood and other kinds of recycled wood to produces syngas that is combusted on site.

  6. Wood gas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_gas

    Staged gasifiers, where pyrolysis and gasification occur separately instead of in the same reaction zone as was the case in the World War II gasifiers, can be engineered to produce essentially tar-free gas (less than 1 mg/m 3), while single-reactor fluidized bed gasifiers may exceed 50,000 mg/m³ tar. The fluidized bed reactors have the ...

  7. Plasma gasification commercialization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_gasification...

    Work continued on the first phase using AlterNRG gasifier, and construction of an identical phase began before the first phase was completed. Each plant used the "world's largest gasifier" to date, but neither was able to run, as the technology had not been proven at scale. Commissioning on the first phase was started in late 2014.

  8. Can you eat bay leaves? What to know about the potential dangers

    www.aol.com/eat-bay-leaves-know-potential...

    The debate over whether bay leaves actually do anything in cooking is ongoing. While some chefs swear that they add a vital flavor profile, others — including celebrity chef Ina Garten — have ...

  9. United States biofuel policies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_biofuel_policies

    Biomass-based biodiesel. Part of the Total Renewable Fuels, this category grows from 0.5 billion US gallons (1,900,000 m 3) in 2009 to 1 billion US gallons (3,800,000 m 3) in 2012. Qualifying biofuels include any diesel fuel made from biomass feedstocks including biodiesel (mono-alkyl esters) and non-ester renewable diesel (cellulosic diesel).