The present Application is a national stage of International Patent Application No. PCT/IT2009/000118, titled “System and Process for the Pyrolysation and Gasification of Organic Substances,” filed Mar. 26, 2009, the contents of which are incorporated in this disclosure by reference in their entirety.
The present invention refers to a system and a process for the pyrolysation and gasification of organic substances, such as in particular biomasses.
As known, pyrolysers are reactors adapted to perform the pyrolysis process: pyrolysis is a process for the thermo-chemical decomposition of organic substances, such as for example biomasses, obtained by applying heat, and with a complete absence of an oxidising agent, normally oxygen, to perform a thermally induced homolysis: under such conditions, the organic substance is subjected to scission of original chemical links, forming simpler molecules.
It is also known that gassing devices exploit the same pyrolysis reaction through heating at the presence, however, of reduced amounts of oxygen: under these conditions, the organic substances are completely destroyed, dividing their molecules, generally long carbon chains, into simpler molecules of carbon monoxide, hydrogen and natural gas, that form a synthesis gas (syngas), mostly composed of natural gas and carbon dioxide, and sometimes pure enough to be used as such. Different from pyrolysers, which strictly perform the pyrolysis, namely with a complete lack of oxygen, the gassing devices, operating instead with small amounts of such element, also produce a partial oxidation. Currently, if organic substances are composed of biomasses, energy captured through the photosynthesis in such substances is freed, either by burning the syngas in a burner to exploit its heat or supply a steam turbine, or by using it as fuel for explosion engines, or obtaining hydrogen therefrom to be then used as fuel cells to produce electricity.
In a more and more growing context of searches for new alternative sources of energy production and waste disposal, the use of pyrolysers or gassing devices for thermo-valorising biomasses and wastes like agricultural and agro-industrial residuals, agricultural and forest virgin biomasses, forest and forest-cultivating residuals, wood and paper working residuals, allows obtaining great advantages, such as a reduced environmental impact both as regards production and as regards transport of produced syngas and good opportunities to re-use the resulting heat.
The prior art, however, does not propose solutions that provide for a combined, synergic and integrated use of at least one pyrolyser and at least one gassing device in a single integrated system, in such a way as to best optimise the operation through suitable thermal and energy cooperation. From the prior art, some systems are known, such as those disclosed in patents n. WO2007077685, US7,214,252, WO2007045291, NZ542062, US2007012229, KR940002987, KR20020093711, KR20020048344, CN2811769Y, that however are still very far from obtaining high efficiencies, since they do not provide for an actually synergic and optimised cooperation between their various components, in particular for pyrolysation and gasification.
Therefore, object of the present invention is solving the above prior art problems, by providing a system and a process for the pyrolysation and gasification of organic substances, such as in particular biomasses, that allow a synergic operation between at least one pyrolysation reactor and at least one gassing device in a single integrated system, allowing to obtain higher efficiencies than those of prior art systems.
The above and other objects and advantages of the invention, as will appear from the following description, are obtained with a system for the pyrolysation and gasification of organic substances as described in claim 1.
Moreover, the above and other objects and advantages of the invention are obtained with a process for the pyrolysation of organic substances as described in claim 16.
Preferred embodiments and non-trivial variations of the present invention are the subject matter of the dependent claims.
It will be immediately obvious that numerous variations and modifications (for example related to shape, sizes, arrangements and parts with equivalent functionality) can be made to what is described, without departing from the scope of the invention as appears from the enclosed claims.
The present invention will be better described by some preferred embodiments thereof, provided as a non-limiting example, with reference to the enclosed drawings, in which the only
With reference then to
The gassing device 30 is further, obviously, supplied with oxygen O2 from fourth channelling means.
Possibly, the system 1 can further comprise at least fifth channelling means of the gasification fuel syngas SG from the gassing device 30 towards at least one burner 27, whose burnt exhaust gases GCB are channelled towards the evaporation module 10, possibly by interposing at least one interspace 25 of the pyrolysis reactor 20.
In particular, the pyrolysis reactor 20 is preferably a rotary mixer pyrolyser 21, composed of a cylinder made of refractory steel insulated by means of a liner composed of insulating material; inside the pyrolysis reactor 20, biomass B, coming from the evaporation module 10 through the first supplying means 15, is degraded at high temperature and without oxygen, producing the pyrolysis fuel syngas SP and the remaining organic products R, mainly composed of a fuel solid (char) whose energy characteristics are similar to lignite, and an oily-tarry residual (tar), also with an interesting energy content. The pyrolysis syngas SP and the gasification syngas SG, present inside the pyrolysis reactor 20 for the reasons stated below, are then taken from the pyrolysis reactor 20 through the first channelling means realised as at least one first duct 22 to supply, by interposing at least one air/air heat exchanger 23 mentioned below, the energy user 40 such as, for example, a generator set, with gas turbine or alternate motor, for producing electric energy.
Preferably, along the first duct 22, it is possible to introduce steam inside the pyrolysis syngas SP and the gasification syngas SG, through suitable supply means 41, to favour the metanisation reaction:
2CO+4H2O→2CH4+3O2
Since the above reaction is highly endothermic, the first duct 22 is preferably completely coated with a thermally refractory concrete.
To prevent organic residuals R from going out, the first duct 22 can further be equipped with at least one barrier scroll 43. The barrier scroll 43 further allows elongating the path made by the pyrolysis syngas SP and the gasification syngas SG inside the first duct 22 further favouring the completion of the above metanisation reaction.
Burnt exhaust gases GCM produced by the energy user 40 are then channelled through the second channelling means realised as at least one second duct 24 to be re-inserted inside the evaporation module 10, possibly by interposing at least one interspace 25 of the pyrolysis reactor 20, in order to pass upwards through the biomass B present inside and perform its drying.
The gassing device 30, placed downstream of the pyrolysis reactor 20, is supplied with the remaining organic products R coming from the pyrolysis reactor 20 itself through the second supplying means and with oxygen O2 through the fourth channelling means, realised as at least one fourth duct 31, by interposing the air/air heat exchanger 23 to produce the gasification syngas SG through a gasification reaction; in particular, oxygen O2 is heated in the air/air heat exchanger 23 by the pyrolysis syngas SP and the gasification syngas SG coming from the pyrolysis reactor 20 obtaining the double purpose of providing heat to the gassing device 30 necessary for the gasification reaction through heated oxygen O2 and cool the pyrolysis syngas SP and the gasification syngas SG, consequently recovering calories, before inserting them in the energy user 40 in which the presence of excessively hot gases would be a useless waste of thermal energy.
In particular, the fourth duct 31 is supplied from the bottom by the gassing device 30 with oxygen O2, doing without the so-called “down draft” supply system present in known gassing devices.
The gasification syngas SG is therefore taken from the gassing device 30 through the third channelling means realised, for example, as at least one third duct 32 to be re-inserted at high temperature inside the pyrolysis reactor 20 in order to provide heat and support the pyrolysis process.
Alternatively, the third channelling means can comprise at least one shower-type duct 35 (merely as an example, in the system 1 of
Through the fifth channelling means, preferably realised as at least one by-pass duct 32a of the third duct 32 and/or the shower-type duct 35, the gasification syngas SG is further channelled towards the burner 27 and the burnt exhaust gases GCB are re-inserted in the evaporation module 10, possibly through the interspace 25 of the pyrolysis reactor 20, in order to integrate the burnt exhaust gases GCM to pass upwards through the biomass B present inside and perform its drying.
On the lower part, the gassing device 30 can be equipped with at least one motored grid 33, at least with semi-spherical shape, as replacement of traditional plane grids of prior art gassing devices. In fact, it is known that plane grids suffer the inconvenience of being often clogged with resulting aggregates coming from the pyrolysis reactor 20, preventing the passage of oxygen O2 and requiring to stop the pyrolisation and gasification reactor in order to take care of cleaning the grid itself. Advantageously, instead, the motored semi-spherical grid 33 of the system 1 according to the present invention is composed of at least one dome 37, at least with a semi-spherical shape with metallic grid, rotatingly hinged around at least one rotation axis 39 driven in rotation by at least one actuating motor (not shown). Therefore, starting from a starting position, for example the one shown in
The motored semi-spherical grid 33 therefore performs the tasks of:
In order to anyway avoid the thermal deterioration or, even more, the melting of the motored semi-spherical grid 33, oxygen O2 supplied from the bottom to the gassing device 30 through the fourth duct 31 can be mixed with steam or nebulised water.
Between the pyrolysis reactor 20 and the gassing device 30, upstream of the second supplying means, it is further possible to provide at least one area equipped with filtering means 28 of the remaining organic products R before inserting them inside the gassing device 30 itself.
In order to allow a more efficient extraction of the burnt exhaust gases GCB e GCM and the evaporation vapours of the biomass B contained inside the evaporation module 10, this latter one is equipped on its upper part with at least one fume exhaust duct 13, possibly cooperating with at least one exhauster or extractor 14.
The first and second supplying means, respectively 15 and 26, are preferably realised as sealed worm screws. In a more simplified embodiment thereof, their rotation could be controlled by a single drive shaft 50 coaxial therewith actuated by at least one engine 51, that possibly rotates also the rotary mixer 21 of the pyrolysis reactor 20 and/or possibly a mixer 12 of the evaporation module 10. Since however the times for supplying the biomass B from the evaporation module 10 to the pyrolysis reactor 20 can be substantially different from the times for supplying the remaining organic products R from the pyrolysis reactor 20 to the gassing device 30, it is clear that a rotation at the same angular speed of the first and second supplying means would be counterproductive for an operation of the system 1 according to the present invention that allows obtaining the best possible efficiency. For such reason, in an alternative embodiment thereof (not shown), the first and second supplying means are rotatingly driven by at least two different rotation shafts that, however, due to reasons of space reduction, and building and operating symmetry of the system 1, appear as rotation shafts one as liner of the other with the same rotation axes: in this way, it is possible to allow a rotation of the first and second supplying means with different angular speeds, depending on the actual supply needs of the various components of the system 1 according to the present invention.
The present invention further refers to a process for the pyrolysation and gasification of organic substances, such as in particular biomasses, through a system 1 as previously described. In particular (with reference to a steady state operation of the system 1), the process according to the present invention comprises the steps of:
a) inserting a biomass B inside the evaporation module 10;
b) drying the biomass B by means of the burnt exhaust gases GCM produced by the energy unit 40 and the burnt exhaust gases GCB produced by the burner 27;
c) transferring the biomass B from the evaporation module 10 to the pyrolysis reactor 20 through the first supplying means;
d) inserting the gasification syngas SG from the gassing device 30 into the pyrolysis reactor 20;
e) performing a pyrolysis reaction of the biomass B inside the pyrolysis reactor 20 to generate pyrolysis syngas SP;
f) transferring the remaining organic products R of the pyrolysis reaction from the pyrolysis reactor 20 to the gassing device 30, possibly through the second supplying means;
g) transferring the pyrolysis syngas SP and the gasification syngas SG from the pyrolysis reactor 20 to the energy user 40 passing through the air/air heat exchanger 23; possibly, mixing the pyrolysis syngas SP and the gasification syngas SG with steam before the air/air heat exchanger 23 in order to favour a metanisation reaction of such syngas;
h) transferring the burnt exhaust gases GCM from the energy unit 40 to the evaporation module 10;
i) supplying the gassing device 30 with oxygen O2 passing through the air/air heat exchanger 23;
j) performing a gasification reaction of the remaining organic products R inside the gassing device 30 to generate gasification syngas SG;
k) transferring the gasification syngas SG from the gassing device 30 to the pyrolysis reactor 20;
l) transferring the gasification syngas SG from the gassing device 30 to the burner 27;
m) transferring the burnt exhaust gases GCB from the burner 27 to the evaporation module 10; and
n) cyclically repeating steps a) to m).
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IT2009/000118 | 3/26/2009 | WO | 00 | 9/6/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/109501 | 9/30/2010 | WO | A |
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