Fast Pyrolysis and Bio Oil Upgrading Presentation)
Fast Pyrolysis and Bio Oil Upgrading Presentation)
Upgrading
Robert C. Brown
Iowa State University
and
Jennifer Holmgren
UOP
Fast Pyrolysis
• Rapid thermal decomposition of organic
compounds in the absence of oxygen to
produce liquids, char, and gas
– Dry feedstock: <10%
– Small particles: <3 mm
– Short residence times: 0.5 - 2 s
– Moderate temperatures (400-500 oC)
– Rapid quenching at the end of the process
– Typical yields
Oil: 60 - 70%
Char: 12 -15%
Gas: 13 - 25%
Source: Piskorz, J., et al. In Pyrolysis Oils White Poplar
Spruce
Bio-Oil
from Biomass, Soltes, E. J., Milne, T. A.,
Eds., ACS Symposium Series 376, 1988.
Moisture content, wt% 7.0 3.3
Particle size, µm (max) 1000 590
Pyrolysis liquid (bio-oil) Temperature 500 497
from flash pyrolysis is a Apparent residence time 0.65 0.48
low viscosity, dark-brown Product Yields, wt %, m.f.
Depolymerization
Levoglucosan
Fast
Alkali-catalyzed
dehydration
Cellulose Hydroxyacetaldehyde
Slow
Char + water
Fast Pyrolysis
• Advantages
– Operates at atmospheric pressure and modest
temperatures (450 C)
– Yields of bio-oil can exceed 70 wt-%
• Disadvantages
– High oxygen and water content of pyrolysis liquids
makes them inferior to conventional hydrocarbon
fuels
– Phase-separation and polymerization of the liquids
and corrosion of containers make storage of these
liquids difficult
Several Kinds of Fast Pyrolysis
Reactors
• Bubbling fluidized bed
• Circulating fluidized beds/transport reactor
• Rotating cone pyrolyzer
• Ablative pyrolyzer
• Vacuum pyrolysis
• Auger reactor
Bubbling Fluidized Bed
Gas, Char, and Oil
Vapors and Aerosol
• Heat supplied externally
to bed Freeboard
• Good mass & heat
transfer Biomass
• Requires small biomass
Fluid bed
particles (2-3 mm) Heat
Feeder
Distributor
plate
Fluidizing gas
Circulating Fluidized Bed/Transport
Reactor
Gas and Oil Vapors
• Hot sand circulated Pyrolyzer and Aerosol
Air
Fluidizing gas
Rotating Cone Pyrolyzer
Vapors and
• Sand and biomass Biomass
Aerosol
Hot Sand
brought into contact
within rotating cone
• Compact design and
does not need carrier
gas
• Requires very small
biomass particles and Rotation
is hard to scale-up
Ablative Pyrolyzer
• High pressure of particle
on hot reactor wall Spinning
achieved by centrifugal Disk
or mechanical motion
Pressure
• Can use large particles Applied
and does not require to Wood Bio-oil
Liquid
carrier gas Released
from Wood
• Complex and does not
scale well
Vacuum Pyrolysis
Biomass Hot
• Hot sand and sand
biomass mixed by
auger Vapors &
aerosol to
• Suitable for small condenser
scale
• Requires hot sand
heating and Char &
circulation system sand
Auger Auger
driver reactor
Relative Merits of Various Reactors
Ablative
MARKET ATTRACTIVENESS
High Cyclonic
Rotating cone
Entrained flow
Fluid bed
Auger
Hopper
Pyrolysis
Char
reactor
Motor Feeder Bio-oil Bio-oil
storage
Fluidizing Combustor
gas
Air
Scale
Diesel Output (million US gallons/yr)
0 50 100 150 200 250
$8,000
Small gasification (multiple units 110,000
Capital Cost (million 2005 US dollars)
$5,000
$4,000
$400,000 pbpd
$3,000
$2,000
$1,000
$100,000 pbpd
$0
0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
Biomass Input (million US tons/yr)
Adapted from: Bridgwater, ACS Meeting, Washington, D.C., 2005
Suitable Feedstocks
• Wide variety of feedstocks can be used
• Fibrous biomass usually employed
• Wood higher yielding than herbaceous
biomass
Storage & Transportation
• Distributed preprocessing allows transport
and storage as liquid
• High acidity requires storage in stainless
steel or plastic
• Stability problems need to be solved
Post Processing to Motor Fuels
• Direct application of bio-oil
• Hydrocracking of bio-oil
• Gasification of bio-oil
• Fermentation of Bio-oil
Bio-Oil Burned in Diesel Engines
Bio-oil vapor
Cyclone
Bio-Oil
Stationary
Char Recovery
Diesel Engine
Pyrolyzer
Bio-Oil
Fibrous
biomass
Bio-Oil
Storage
Bio-Oil Hydrocracking
• Directly converts biomass into liquid bio-oil (lignin,
carbohydrate derivatives, and water) and char
• Bio-oil catalytically converted into hydrocarbon fuel
(green diesel) Green
diesel
Bio-oil vapor
Cyclone
Hydrocracker
Steam Hydrogen
Bio-Oil
Char Recovery Reformer
Carbohydrate derived
Pyrolyzer
Entrained Flow
Fischer Tropsch
Bio-Oil
Gasifier
Reactor
Recovery
Pyrolyzer
Bio-Oil
Fibrous Pump
biomass
Slurry
Char Preparation
Slag Green
Diesel
Bio-Oil Fermentation
Fiber Distillation
Ethanol
Pentose
Hot water
extraction
Fermenter
Fiber byproduct
Bio-Oil
Char Detoxification
Recovery
Fermenter
Pyrolyzer
Phase
Separation Anhydrosugar &
other carbohydrate
Lignin
Energy Efficiency
Source: http://www.ensyn.com/info/23102000.htm
Co-Products
• Gas (CO, H2, light
hydrocarbons)
– Can be used to heat
pyrolysis reactor
• Char: Several potential
applications
– Process heat
– Activated carbon
– Soil amendment
Potential Co-Products from Bio-Oil
Products of pyrolysis for several different pretreatments of cornstover (Brown et al. 2001)
MBPD
MBPD
30 8
6
20
4
10
2
0 0
Current Potential Current Potential
Gasoline
Solid
Pyrolysis Oil/
Cellulosic
Lignin Hydrogen/
Biomass
Power Generation
Diesel
Lignin Molecular Structure
Treating Technologies
Hydrotreating
• Hydrotreating is the key process
to meet quality specifications for
refinery fuel products
• Removes sulfur, nitrogen, olefins,
and metals using hydrogen
• Hydrogen addition also improves
the quality of distillate fuels (poly
aromatics, cetane, smoke point)
• Treating feedstocks for other
processing units
Conversion Technologies
Hydrocracking
• Hydrocracking upgrades heavy
feeds including gas oils and
cycle oils into lighter, higher
value, low sulfur products
• High pressure is used to add
hydrogen and produce
premium distillate products
• Naphtha products normally are
low octane and are upgraded
in a reformer
• Product volume is 10-20%
higher than the feedstock
Hydrocracking Catalyst Portfolio
New Generation
HC-215 Current Generation
Distillates Selectivity
HC-115
DHC-8 Flexible Max
Naphtha
DHC-32
HC-150
DHC-39
DHC -41
DHC-41 HC-170
HC-43 HC-29 HC-190
Max HC-33
Diesel Distillates HC-26
HC-24 HC-34
Activity
$ 4.2 million/year
Hydroprocessing costs:
Effect of Scale
HDT Capital Cost vs Capacity
Cost/
1000 $35.0
Unit size Cost, bpd Capital Cost, $MM (2006)
(bpd) $MM $MM $30.0
30000 $28.9 $ 0.96
$25.0
27500 $27.4 $ 1.00
25000 $25.9 $ 1.04 $20.0
22500 $24.3 $ 1.08
20000 $22.7 $ 1.13 $15.0
17500 $20.9 $ 1.19 $10.0
15000 $19.1 $ 1.27
12500 $17.1 $ 1.37 $5.0
10000 $14.9 $ 1.49
7500 $12.6 $ 1.68 $0.0
5000 $9.9 $ 1.97 0 5000 10000 15000 20000 25000 30000 35000
2500 $6.5 $ 2.60
Capacity, BPD
Size of Hydroprocessing Units
2000 bpd HC units
2500 bbl/day
38.3 M gal/year pyrolysis oil processed
Dynamotive’s Planned 174072 tonnes/yr pyrolysis oil processed
200 tpd Plant 65%
267803 tonnes/yr
Conv. to biooil
biomass
Dynamotive's 200 tonne/day facility (planned production) 734 tonne/day plant
200 tonne/day biomass processed
200000 kg/day
% conversion
biomass to pyrolysis
65% oil 30,000 bpd HC unit
130000 kg/day biooil
1.2 kg/liter density of pyrolysis oil (typical refinery size)
108333 liter/day
30000 bbl/day
28622 gal/day
459.9 M gal/year pyrolysis oil processed
681 bbl/day Hydroprocessing unit
2088866 tonnes/yr pyrolysis oil processed
65% Conv. to biooil
3213640 tonnes/yr biomass
8804 tonne/day plant
Example:
Potential from logging residues
41 Million dry tons logging residue available (Billion ton annual study)
10% % water of biomass for pyrolysis unit
46 Million tons of logging residue feed
65% % conversion to pyrolysis oil
29.6 million tons of pyrolysis oil
6519 M gallons of pyrolysis oil from logging residue
425271 bbl/day
P P Gasification
H2
Synthesis Gas
Reforming
P P
UOP 4434A-36
Acknowledgements
DOE, Project DE-FG36-05GO15085
Contributors Contributors
MTU PNNL
– David Shonnard – Doug Elliott
NREL – Don Stevens
– Stefan Czernik UOP
– Richard Bain – Tom Kalnes
– Terry Marker
– Dave Mackowiak
– Mike McCall
– John Petri
Project Manager: Rich Marinangeli