May-June 2009

Turbines Running on ... Renewables

Never mind wind power: Hydrogen from biomass is becoming viable for off-grid power.

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By David Engle

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On the negative side, though, coal mining remains nasty, dangerous work, and environmentally disruptive. So, despite synfuels’ comparative virtues, they’re perhaps not the perfect ideal yet. Although synfuels have lost just a tad of the allure they enjoyed initially, they remain—at least until the Obama administration makes a change—a central DOE fuel objective, Acharya notes. And, important research and innovations aimed at reducing the production cost are still ongoing, globally.

Microturbines Fueled Onsite … By Pyrolysis
Hydrogen derived from this coal process would be aimed primarily at running centralized electric plants; but what about alternative turbine fuels specifically for distributed power? Here, another similar gasifying process, called pyrolysis, has lately been introduced near the Alpine region of northern Italy to power an Ingersoll Rand (IR) microturbine in an onsite, renewable power role, IR reports. 

Pyrolysis—more apt for woody waste, which is abundant in many parts of the world and easier to get at than coal—promises potentially far-reaching usability. Though not as widely known as ethanol or methane digester gas, notes IR business development and marketing manager, James Watts, wood pyrolysis gas “is something of an alternative to biomass” as a fuel. An onsite pyrolysis plant offers the appeal of renewable distributed energy—without being tethered to a landfill or wastewater treatment plant for its renewable fuel.

“The beauty of pyrolysis, [compared with digestion reactors], is that you can use more lignin-based materials [like] corn husks or rice,” continues Watts. “It’s not digestion”—as is the case with the organics yielding gases in any bioreactor.

“You’re not just limited to carbohydrates and fats [and digestible organics] … of that nature,” again, typical of many municipal waste streams,” he adds. “You can use more cellulosic types of sources,” such as are found at granaries, farms, poultry coups, in forestry, at lumber mills, and at scrap wood or other plant vegetation sites.

These woody sources are typically less amenable to anaerobic digestion at a treatment plant relying on microbes, which also need controlled conditions.

By contrast, the material for pyrolysis can be gathered, dried in the air or sun as needed, and simply fed into a pyrolizer for rapid rendering into gaseous fuel. 

To begin the process, heat is first applied in the absence of oxygen or other reagent; soon, gases are emitted, effectively “kick-starting” its own pyrolyzing fuel source, so that the cycle becomes both self-sustaining and a net fuel and energy gainer.

At the end of the sequence, gases emerge for collection “as a nice mix, that we’ve been able to get to work successfully with our microturbines,” name-plated at 250 kW, says Watts.

Besides the woody materials noted above, other potential feed stocks might include dedicated produce like palm oil, rapeseed, or sunflower oil, for example, or mixed animal and vegetable biomasses, green cuts, straw, vegetable waste, and livestock manure, even having high-moisture content, according to product literature from a pyrolysis firm. 

For preparatory drying, exhaust heat from the engine can be applied.

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Pyrolysis process speeds can also be hastened, and raw ingredients varied, to suit whatever stock is available and to alter the gaseous proportional outcomes—H2, carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide, methane, and others—as desired.

Gaseous outputs are then dried and prepared to run engines. Even the ash can be recycled into high-quality fertilizer. Next Page >

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