Jurnal Polimesin
Vol 23, No 6 (2025): December

The effect of biomass ratio and CaO/Si catalyst on hydrogen production from corncob–wood pellet gasification

Suwandono, Purbo (Unknown)
Wijayanti, Widya (Unknown)
Ismail, Nova Risdiyanto (Unknown)
Akbar, Dzulfikar Johan (Unknown)
Pambudi, Wisnu Setyo Catur (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
31 Dec 2025

Abstract

Biomass co-gasification combined with catalytic upgrading offers a promising pathway for enhancing hydrogen-rich syngas production. This study investigates co-gasification of corncob and wood pellets in an updraft fixed-bed reactor, integrated with ex-situ CaO/Si catalytic upgrading. Nine experimental runs were conducted by varying the corncob: pellet ratio (1:1–3:1), catalyst loading (6–10 wt% of 80 g biomass), and CaO/Si ratio (1:1–3:1), while reactor geometry, inlet air speed (10 m/s), and run duration (1500 s) were kept constant. The product gas was routed through an ex-situ catalyst bed, cooled in a condenser, and then analyzed using calibrated MQ sensors (H₂, CH₄, CO, CO₂). Gas composition was monitored using calibrated MQ sensors to provide comparative trends among operating conditions. The best performance was observed in Run 7 (50:50 biomass ratio, 10 wt% catalyst, CaO/Si = 2:1), achieving peak H₂ at 8000 ppm and CH₄ at 46,000 ppm, while CO₂ decreased to 16,000 ppm compared with several other runs. This outcome was consistent with CO₂ sorption by CaO, which can shift reactions toward higher H₂ formation (e.g., via the WGS equilibrium), and was supported by downstream upgrading reactions in the hot-gas line. The results suggest that combining biomass blending with ex-situ CaO/Si upgrading can improve the characteristics of hydrogen-enriched syngas within the investigated operating range.Biomass co-gasification combined with catalytic upgrading offers a promising pathway for enhancing hydrogen-rich syngas production. This study investigates co-gasification of corncob and wood pellets in an updraft fixed-bed reactor, integrated with ex-situ CaO/Si catalytic upgrading. Nine experimental runs were conducted by varying the corncob: pellet ratio (1:1–3:1), catalyst loading (6–10 wt% of 80 g biomass), and CaO/Si ratio (1:1–3:1), while reactor geometry, inlet air speed (10 m/s), and run duration (1500 s) were kept constant. The product gas was routed through an ex-situ catalyst bed, cooled in a condenser, and then analyzed using calibrated MQ sensors (H₂, CH₄, CO, CO₂). Gas composition was monitored using calibrated MQ sensors to provide comparative trends among operating conditions. The best performance was observed in Run 7 (50:50 biomass ratio, 10 wt% catalyst, CaO/Si = 2:1), achieving peak H₂ at 8000 ppm and CH₄ at 46,000 ppm, while CO₂ decreased to 16,000 ppm compared with several other runs. This outcome was consistent with CO₂ sorption by CaO, which can shift reactions toward higher H₂ formation (e.g., via the WGS equilibrium), and was supported by downstream upgrading reactions in the hot-gas line. The results suggest that combining biomass blending with ex-situ CaO/Si upgrading can improve the characteristics of hydrogen-enriched syngas within the investigated operating range.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

polimesin

Publisher

Subject

Automotive Engineering Control & Systems Engineering Engineering Materials Science & Nanotechnology Mechanical Engineering

Description

Polimesin mostly publishes studies in the core areas of mechanical engineering, such as energy conversion, machine and mechanism design, and manufacturing technology. As science and technology develop rapidly in combination with other disciplines such as electrical, Polimesin also adapts to new ...