화학공학소재연구정보센터
Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, Vol.49, No.6, 2694-2700, 2010
Effect of Metals on Supercritical Water Gasification of Cellulose and Lignin
We gasified cellulose and lignin in supercritical water, using quartz reactors, and quantified the catalytic effect of metals by adding them to these reactors in different forms. We used nickel, iron, copper, zinc, and zirconium wires, ruthenium powder, and Raney nickel slurry. The presence of metals was more likely to increase gas yields to a measurable extent when the catalyst surface area/biomass weight ratio was at least 15 mm(2)/mg (5.0 wt % biomass loading in Our experiments). Nickel and copper typically provided higher gas yields at 5.0 wt % loading, and nickel provided the highest H-2 yields at 1.0 wt % loading. SCWG at 500 degrees C with nickel at 240 mm(2)/mg generated 16 mmol/g of H-2 from cellulose. CH4 yields were not strongly influenced by the presence of metals. With nickel wires in the reactor, gas with about 40-50% of the energy content in the original biomass was produced from cellulose and lignin. All of the metals tested except copper produced H-2 from water when exposed to SCWG conditions with no biomass. It is important that this background H-2 formation be accounted for when interpreting results from SCWG experiments in the presence of metals. Exposure of nickel wires to supercritical water did not reduce their activity for H-2 production.