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28 Aug 2008 Register / Login F F F
18 Jan 2002

Fueling Buses With Peanuts

Author
Alton Parrish, Editor, Fuel Cell Technology News
The goal of a three-year public-private partnership is the production of renewable hydrogen from peanut waste and other agricultural residues to provide fuel for buses.  The cost is expected to be comparable to existing methane-reforming technologies.

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In cooperation with Clark Atlanta University, Scientific Carbons, Georgia Institute of Technology and Enviro-Tech, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory has demonstrated the production of hydrogen from biomass-derived pyrolysis vapors.  Following shakedown tests at NREL, the reformer will be installed at Scientific Carbons’ activated carbon production facility.  Hydrogen produced at the facility will be used in transit applications, most likely buses, in the Albany (Georgia) metropolitan area in a future phase of the effort. The hydrogen produced will be blended with CNG to fuel buses.

Hydrogen was produced at the NREL ThermoChemical User Facility (TCUF) using a pyrolysis/steam reforming system designed and constructed in conjunction with the project team.  The pyrolyzer and reformer are fluidized bed reactors, designed to process 20 kg/hour biomass and 15 kg/hr pyrolysis vapors, respectively.

Pelletized peanut shells obtained from Birdsong (Blakely, GA) – the world’s second largest peanut processing company – were fed to the pyrolysis reactor.  Superheated steam at a flow ratio of 1.5:1 was used as a carrier gas and also as a reactant in the reformer.

The NREL test proceeded very smoothly.  The composition of the gas indicates the hydrogen yield from this agricultural residue feedstock is about 90 per cent of maximum.  Additional optimization of process conditions should result in somewhat higher yields (note: in a commercial operation, the remaining CO would be converted to additional hydrogen using conventional water-gas shift processing).  In these tests, the gas product stream was flared.  Estimated hydrogen flows were 20 Nm3.  Following additional testing, the reformer will be installed and operated at Scientific Carbons.

The strategy of the research partnership is to produce hydrogen from biomass pyrolysis oils in conjunction with high value co-products.  Activated carbon can be made from agricultural residues in a two-stage process: (1) slow pyrolysis of biomass to produce charcoal, and (2) high temperature processing to form activated carbon. The vapor by-products from the first step can be steam reformed into hydrogen.  NREL has developed the technology for bio-oil to hydrogen via catalytic steam reforming and shift conversion.  The process has been demonstrated at the bench scale and Phase 1 testing of the reformer began in 2001.  A preliminary economic analysis of the base case process assumes utilization of all of the pyrolysis vapors (225 kg/hr) at the current scale of the Scientific Carbons Inc. process.  For an annual hydrogen production rate of 4.4 million Nm3, the selling price of hydrogen is estimated to be $9.50/GJ.

The production of hydrogen from biomass, particularly agricultural residues,  makes economic sense when combined with the production of additional value-added products, such as activated carbon.

For more information on this story or Fuel Cell Technology News, go to www.bccresearch.com.