1. Introduction
Thermal gasification of organic waste is the process of waste conversion into a gaseous state due to the supply of a gasifying agent and heat to allow for endothermic thermal decomposition, dehydrogenation, water–gas, Boudouard, steam and dry reforming, etc., reactions, as well as exothermic oxidation, partial oxidation, and hydrogasification reactions. The gasifying agent is usually air, oxygen, steam, or carbon dioxide. The most valuable gasification product is syngas containing, on the one hand, H
2 and CO, and, on the other hand, non-condensable lower hydrocarbons such as CH
4, C
2H
6, etc., and CO
2. Syngas is used to produce various chemicals (methanol, ammonia, etc.) and motor fuels. It exhibits a low heating value (LHV) of 15–17 MJ/kg (12–16 MJ/nm
3). The LHVs of its main combustible constituents are 10.8 MJ/nm
3 (H
2), 12.6 MJ/nm
3 (CO), and 35.8 MJ/nm
3 (CH
4). By-products of gasification are char and tar, which can store a significant part of the carbon contained in the waste. The quality of syngas is higher the more H
2 and CO it contains, and their relative content can vary over a wide range determined by many factors. The efficiency of the gasification process is higher the greater the syngas yield and the less carbon remains in by-products (the higher the carbon conversion). Modern technologies for the thermal gasification of organic wastes are presented in monographs [
1,
2]. Other methods used for the gasification of organic wastes include supercritical water gasification (at above 374 °C and 22.1 MPa) [
3] and biological methods based, e.g., on fermentation [
4].
All thermal waste gasification technologies can be divided into two groups: low-temperature (800–1300 K) and high-temperature (above 1500 K). Low-temperature gasification technologies are characterized by relatively low-quality syngas due to high content of tar (up to 27%wt dry basis, d.b.) and CO
2 (up to 30%vol d.b.); low gasification efficiencies due to high char residues (up to 40%wt d.b.); difficult in situ gas quality control due to the need in long residence times of feedstock in the reaction zone (up to 100 min); and low process efficiency due to low gas yields (below 90%wt d.b.), high tar and char contents and partial use of syngas (together with product char) for the production of heat required for gasification [
5]. Currently, for improving the carbon conversion efficiency, efforts are directed on increasing feedstock reactivity by adding various catalysts, as well as preprocessing of feedstock and postprocessing of product syngas [
6,
7]. High-temperature gasification provides high-quality syngas due to negligible or low content of tar (less than 1 g/nm
3) and CO
2 (less than 6%vol d.b.); high gasification efficiencies with carbon conversion efficiency attaining 100% due to negligible or small tar and char residues; easy in situ gas quality control due to relatively short residence times of feedstock (less than 5–10 min) in the reaction zone; and high process efficiency due to the use of electric or solar energy for the production of heat required for gasification [
8]. Currently, the most promising high-temperature technologies include electric arc [
9,
10] and microwave [
11] plasma technologies, as well as detonation technologies [
12]. As for the plasma technologies, they require huge electricity consumption and special structural materials and/or refractory linings for gasifier walls. In addition, feedstock gasification in plasma reactors mainly occurs at temperatures of 1500–2200 K, so the gas–plasma transition turns out to be an unnecessary and energy-consuming intermediate stage. As for the detonation technologies, they provide similar gasification temperatures (above 2200 K) without gas–plasma transition but do not need special structural materials and/or refractory linings for gasifier walls. The first mentions of detonation technologies go back to [
13,
14], where pulverized coal gasification was studied in a single-pulse detonation-induced flow with the coal particle residence time in the detonation products ranging from 1 to 15 ms. Despite too few tests being performed for conclusive statements, combined yields of CO and CH
4 attained 40% of the total initial carbon content in the coal samples. The author of [
15] filed a patent on a pulse detonation device for autothermal coal gasification. The pulse detonation device was intended for discharging high-pressure steam, oxygen, and other exhaust products into the bed of coal in a gasifier. It was implied that the high-temperature, high-pressure exhaust pulses might enhance the gasification process, keeping the coal bed from excessive slagging. It was also implied in [
15] that the purge air between detonation cycles was discharged into the coal bed to support coal combustion. Consequently, a part of the available carbon was consumed by combustion. The remaining carbon was consumed in gasification reactions with carbon dioxide, steam, and hydrogen creating product gases. The product gases were subsequently burned in a combustion chamber for powering a gas turbine. The authors of [
16] showed the potential of using pulsed detonations for mechanical removal of slag and fouling deposits from heat transfer surfaces in coal-firing power plants. In this paper, we demonstrate the allothermal technology of a pulsed detonation gun for gasification of organic wastes with ultra-superheated steam (USS), which was first proposed in [
17,
18,
19] and substantiated in [
20,
21].
2. Methods and Materials
2.1. Pulsed Detonation Gun Technology
Figure 1 shows the schematic of organic-waste gasifier operating on the pulsed detonation gun technology. The main elements of the gasifier are the pulsed detonation tube and flow reactor connected to each other; supply systems of fuel, oxygen, low-temperature steam, and feedstock; and the product syngas dryer. The pulsed detonation tube is generally fed by a pressurized mixture of syngas, oxygen, and steam. The starting fuel (natural gas, propane–butane, gasoline, diesel oil, associated petroleum gas, etc.) is used only initially to bring the gasifier to the operation mode and thereafter replaced by the product syngas. The feedstock is supplied to the reactor either separately or with hot and dense supersonic jets of detonation products periodically emanating to the reactor and is gasified in strong vortical flows in the reactor. The product syngas is partly used for feeding the pulsed detonation tube, while the remaining part goes to an external user. The former part of syngas must be compressed to maintain the feed of the pulsed detonation tube.
Figure 2 shows a schematic of an experimental gasifier [
6,
7]. The gasifier was designed based on multidimensional gas dynamic calculations described in [
20]. It consists of two communicating units: pulsed detonation gun in the form of a round tube with a Y-shaped end section and a spherical flow reactor. The pulsed detonation gun with a frequency of
f ≥ 1 Hz generates and transmits counter-propagating strong shock waves and supersonic jets of a gasifying agent to the flow reactor. The gasifying agent is an ultra-superheated mixture of steam and carbon dioxide with a temperature above 2200 K, containing up to 80%vol H
2O and up to 20%vol CO
2. The gasifying agent is formed as a product of pulsed detonation of a natural gas–oxygen mixture diluted with low-temperature steam. Counter shock waves and supersonic jets of the high-temperature gasifying agent form powerful vortex zones in the flow reactor, in which particles of crushed waste circulate undergoing gasification. The gasification product (syngas) continuously flows out of the reactor through the outlet tube. To exclude suction of atmospheric air, a slight overpressure (usually 0.01–0.03 MPa) is maintained in the flow reactor. The water-cooling jackets of pulsed detonation gun and flow reactor maintain the wall temperature
Tw below 450 K but above 373 K to avoid steam condensation.
Figure 3 shows the calculated time histories of the mean temperature in a 100 L flow reactor at pulsed detonation gun operation with a frequency of
f = 1 and 5 Hz without waste feed. The value of 5 Hz is taken as an extreme condition just to show a difference. Calculations were performed according to the procedure described in [
20]. The mass of USS released to the flow reactor in each detonation pulse was ~10 g. Reactor walls were maintained at a constant temperature of
Tw = 450 K. The sawtooth-like variation in the mean temperature is caused by the periodic release of shock waves and supersonic USS jets into the flow reactor with subsequent expansion of USS to a pressure of
P = 0.1 MPa and its cooling on the reactor walls. During the operation of the pulsed detonation gun with a frequency of
f = 1 and 5 Hz, the time-averaged mean temperature of the USS was 1200 K and 2200 K, respectively. Additionally,
Figure 4 shows the influence of the reactor wall temperature on the calculated time histories of the mean USS temperature in the flow reactor during pulsed detonation gun operation at a frequency of 5 Hz without waste feed. A change in the temperature of the reactor wall from 450 to 800 K leads only to a slight increase in the time-averaged mean USS temperature: from 2200 to 2300 K. This means that the walls of the flow reactor can be cooled, and it is not necessary to use expensive heat-resistant materials for their manufacture.
2.2. Gasifier
The pulsed detonation gun is a water-cooled stainless-steel tube with an inner diameter of 50 mm and wall thickness of 2.5 mm. The tube contains three sections: a mixing and ignition device, a flame acceleration section 0.9 m long, and a Y-shaped end section (hereinafter referred to as the “Y-section”) with tube branching. Each of the two branches of the Y-section is a tube 50 mm in internal diameter and 1.4 m long.
The mixing and ignition device is equipped with a mixing head with supply manifolds for natural gas, oxygen, and low-temperature steam, as well as two standard spark plugs (VAZ, Russia) with ignition energies of ~100 mJ. Each manifold is equipped with a flame arrester (Donmet, KOG, Russia) controlled by solenoid valve (Rosma, Russia) and check valve (Donmet, KOK, Russia). Natural gas and oxygen are supplied to the pulsed detonation gun from the pressurized fuel and oxygen receivers, which communicate with natural gas cylinders (EM12-50x20-M, Monitoring-NPO, Russia) (volume 600 L) and liquid oxygen cryocylinder (DWP650-495-1.6, CIMC Sanctum Cryogenic Equipment & Co, China) (volume 495 L), respectively. Low-temperature steam is supplied to the gun to form an inert “plug” between hot detonation products of each previous operation cycle and fresh fuel mixture of each new cycle to prevent parasitic ignition. Steam is supplied from the industrial electric steam generator EPG-100 (Russia) through a heat-insulated line. The steam generator has a capacity of up to 50 kg/h with a maximum steam temperature of 150 °C. High voltage (30 kV) is supplied to the spark plugs from the standard automobile ignition module (VAZ, Russia).
The flame acceleration section is designed to ensure fast deflagration-to-detonation transition (DDT) and the formation of a steady detonation wave in natural gas–oxygen mixture. In this section, the apparent flame velocity increases from several meters per second to ~2.4 km/s. At the end of the flame acceleration section, a low-temperature steam supply manifold is installed, also equipped with a flame arrester controlled by solenoid and check valves. Low-temperature steam is supplied from the EPG-100 electric steam generator through a heat-insulated line to form a ternary “natural gas–oxygen–steam” mixture in the Y-section of the pulsed detonation gun.
The Y-section of the pulsed detonation gun is designed to split the detonation wave generated in the flame acceleration section into two steady-state detonation waves. These two detonation waves propagate in the branch tubes filled with the ternary natural gas–oxygen–steam mixture and enter the flow reactor synchronously. At the end of each branch tube, spray injectors connected with manifolds 6 mm in diameter and 3 m long are provided for continuous feed of liquid waste at a mass flow rate of up to 10 g/s from a 6 L tank. The tank is pressurized by nitrogen or air at the overpressure ranging from 0.1 to 0.4 MPa. In addition, at the end of each branch tube, it is possible to install screw feeders of crushed solid waste with the rotation speed controlled by a frequency converter. In periodic detonation waves, both liquid and solid wastes undergo fine aerodynamic fragmentation and enter the reactor together with supersonic jets of hot detonation products.
The flow reactor with a volume of 100 L is made of steel with a sectioned water-cooling jacket. The flow reactor withstands an accidental internal explosion with the maximum overpressure of ~1.4 MPa inherent in the explosion of methane–oxygen mixture. The inner surface of the flow reactor is designed so that no stagnant zones are formed, in which waste could accumulate. The flow reactor is equipped with four flanges. Two opposite horizontal flanges are used for connecting the branch tubes of the Y-section. The lower (technological) flange is designed for loading batches of solid waste, removing solid mineral residue, visual inspection, etc. The outlet tube is connected to the upper flange through a separator device aimed for removing gaseous gasification products (syngas). The separator device is fabricated in the form of a perforated tube 40 mm in diameter with 4 mm holes covered with a screen to prevent particles of liquid and solid waste from entering the outlet tube. Hot syngas flows from the reactor to a tubular cooler, where it is dried, quenched, and cooled to 40 °C. Next, the syngas enters the cyclone for fine separation of the condensed and gas phases. Water condensate and mineral residues are held in a reservoir in the lower part of the cyclone and periodically removed, while the flow of dry syngas branches: one (small) part of it enters the gas analysis system, and the other is directed to a diffusion burner equipped with a water-spray-assisted flame-extinguishing system. Note that burning the product syngas is only the intermediate solution. After the pulsed detonation gun technology is thoroughly tested, a part (about 20%) of the product syngas will replace natural gas for USS production, whereas the rest of the product syngas will be used for downstream needs, i.e., production of heat, electricity, chemicals, etc.
The gas analysis system consists of a sample preparation line with condensation of vapors, fine filters (standard automotive fuel filters) and three glass flasks with diesel oil connected in series. In flasks, the product syngas is bubbling through diesel oil, reaching a high degree of purification, and enters the sensors of the flow gas analyzer MRU VARIO SYNGAS PLUS (Germany). The gas analyzer records the volume fractions of H2, CO, CO2, CxHy, O2 and N2. The volume fraction of H2O in the syngas is estimated from the mass of the condensate. The measurement error of volume fractions is estimated at 5%. Data on the composition of the syngas are displayed on the screen and recorded in the memory unit of the gas analyzer.
The most important systems in the gasifier are safety system and control system based on relay TEMP-1M (Russia). They include sensors and actuators. During normal operation of the gasifier, flame arresters with fast-acting check valves on the natural gas, oxygen, and steam supply lines prevent the flame from flashing up the lines. A misfire or a failure of DDT in the pulsed detonation gun can result in a release of explosive mixture to the flow reactor with a danger of subsequent internal explosion. The danger of internal explosion is increased by several successive misfires or failures of DDT. To improve ignition reliability, two spark plugs are installed in the mixing and ignition device. In addition, a pressure sensor installed at the reactor inlet is used to monitor a misfire: if the overpressure is below a certain threshold value, the pulsed detonation gun is purged with low-temperature steam. To ensure the inherent safety of the operation process in case of DDT failure, the branch tubes of the Y-section are always filled only partly with the explosive mixture. When DDT fails, the flame front “covers” the entire charge of the explosive mixture before it enters the flow reactor. In addition, to monitor the failure of DDT, two pairs of ionization probes [
22] installed in both branch tubes of the Y-section are used. Based on the readings of the probes, the instantaneous propagation velocities of detonation waves are determined. When DDT fails, the pulsed detonation gun is purged with low-temperature steam. To monitor the pressure and temperature in the flow reactor, a pressure sensor (Curant DI 1.6 MPa, Metronic, Russia) and thermocouple (Oven, Russia) installed in the outlet tube immediately after the separator device are used. Thermocouples are also used to monitor the coolant temperature in the water-cooling jackets of the pulsed detonation gun and flow reactor.
The operation of the gasifier includes three successive stages: starting mode, steady-state thermal mode and shutdown mode. In the starting mode, neither steam nor waste are fed to the gasifier, but changes in the thermal state of the gasifier and in the composition of the cooled dry detonation products are monitored. The start-up mode switches to a steady-state thermal mode when the temperature of the coolant in the cooling jackets of the pulsed detonation gun and flow reactor reaches a predetermined constant level (110–140 °C), and the composition of the cooled dry detonation products stops changing with time. Note, the time taken for the volume fractions of gas components to reach steady-state values is determined not only by the thermal state of the gasifier, but also by the response time of the sensors, the rate of purging the sampling line in the gas analyzer, and the rate of gas substitution in the analyzer volume. Considering all these factors, the time for the gasifier to reach a steady-state thermal mode is about 5 min. After the gasifier has reached a steady-state thermal mode, steam and waste can be additionally fed to it: in this case, the gas analyzer shows the composition of the product syngas. The feed of steam and waste leads to a new short-term transient operation, but now the thermal state of the gasifier does not change much. In the shutdown mode, the waste feed is first stopped, then the supply of natural gas, oxygen and steam is sequentially stopped.
The gasifier is placed in a 20-foot sea container and is equipped with all necessary inputs (electricity, oxygen, natural gas, water), a syngas utilization box with a diffusion gas burner and a flame extinguishing system, as well as communication lines for remote control of the operation process.
2.3. Materials
Four series of experiments were performed. In the first preliminary series, multiple experiments were performed aimed at controlling detonations in the pulsed detonation gun and testing all systems of the gasifier, including the safety system. In the second series, the chemical composition of the cooled dry detonation products of natural gas–oxygen mixture was determined. This series of experiments was performed without liquid/solid waste feed into the gasifier. The composition of natural gas is shown in
Table 1. In the third and fourth series, experiments on liquid and solid organic wastes, namely, waste machine oil and wood (birch) sawdust, were performed, respectively. The proximate and ultimate analyses of birch wood and waste machine oil are shown in
Table 2. At this stage of the study, all experiments were performed without diluting the natural gas–oxygen mixture with low-temperature steam at a frequency of detonation pulses
f = 1 Hz, because the detonation products of natural gas–oxygen mixtures contain a significant amount of steam. For example, the equilibrium concentration of H
2O in the detonation products of the stoichiometric methane–oxygen mixture expanded to 0.1 MPa is about 65%vol (see below). Each experimental run was repeated at least 3 times to collect the data on the reproducibility of results in terms of the average value and the run-to-run scatter of this value.
4. Discussion
Figure 13 compares the compositions of the syngas obtained in all experiments with natural gas conversion, as well as in experiments with the feed of liquid and solid organic wastes under the same conditions (
f = 1 Hz,
P ≈ 0.1 MPa). Comparison of syngas compositions is made in terms of the dependences of the steady-state values of H
2, CO, and CH
4 volume fractions on the CO
2 volume fraction in the product syngas. With a decrease in the volume fraction of CO
2 caused by the supply of natural gas, liquid or solid waste, the volume fractions of H
2 and CO are seen to increase, with H
2 tending to 60%vol d.b. and CO reaching a plateau at 40%vol d.b. It is interesting that the composition of the syngas in terms of H
2 and CO volume fractions, which is produced in the gasifier at
f = 1 Hz and
P ≈ 0.1 MPa, looks almost independent of the type of organic feedstock—natural gas, liquid waste oil, or solid sawdust, despite natural gas conversion occurs in the detonation waves at very high temperatures for a relatively short time (several milliseconds), whereas liquid and solid wastes are gasified in the flow reactor at considerably lower temperatures but a considerably longer time (several seconds). The former is the reason that CH
4 volume fraction in the product syngas of natural gas conversion is zero, and the latter is the reason that CH
4 volume fraction in the product syngas of liquid/solid waste gasification is nonzero and reaches ~8%.
Very similar compositions of syngas were reported by other researchers using high-temperature techniques for organic waste gasification. Thus, the plasma torch with hybrid water/gas stabilization of arc was used in [
9,
10] for steam/CO
2 gasification of pyrolysis oil, wood sawdust, and refuse-derived fuel at a mean process temperature of 1150–1350 K and pressure of 0.1 MPa, which is very close to the process mean temperature and pressure in the current experiments (~1200 K and 0.1 MPa). For pyrolysis oil, the volume fractions of H
2, CO, and CH
4 in the product syngas were 58, 33, and 4.9%, respectively, at CO
2 volume fraction of 4% [
10]. For wood sawdust, the volume fractions of H
2, CO, and CH
4 in the product syngas were 42–43, 44–49, and 1.3–1.7%, respectively, at CO
2 volume fraction of 4.7–7.2% [
9]. For refuse-derived fuel, containing 47%wt plastics, 24%wt wood and paper, 10%wt textiles, and 18%wt fines, the volume fractions of H
2, CO and CH
4 in the product syngas were 41–50, 44–41, and 5–3%, respectively, at CO
2 volume fraction of 9.4–6.5% [
10]. These results fit well the data of
Figure 13.
Gasification of liquid and solid wastes occurs mainly due to the heterogeneous endothermic reactions of water gas, Boudouard, and hydrogasification [
1,
2]:
as well as gas-phase reactions of steam and dry reforming, and the water–gas shift reaction:
The rates of these reactions are highly dependent on the temperature of the gasifying agent, and the degree of completion of these reactions depends on the residence times of condensed and gas phases in the flow reactor. At what temperature do reactions (1), (2) and other accompanying processes proceed, if one considers the sawtooth-like change in the mean temperature (see
Figure 3) in a flow reactor? To answer this question, let us consider
Figure 14, supplementing
Figure 3.
Figure 14 shows the calculated time histories of the maximum temperature
Tmax in the flow reactor during steady-state operation of the pulsed detonation gun with a frequency of
f = 1 and 5 Hz without waste feed. The red horizontal lines show the corresponding time-averaged mean temperatures of 1200 K and 2200 K. Let us first consider the curves for
f = 1 Hz, that is, the frequency used in the experiments. During the first quarter of the cycle (~0.25 s), the maximum temperature is seen to be very high: 1500 ≤
Tmax ≤ 2300 K. Then, in the second quarter of the cycle, it decreases to 1200 ≤
Tmax ≤ 1500 K and in the second half of the cycle it drops below 1200 K. If the operation frequency of the pulsed detonation gun rises to
f = 5 Hz, then
Tmax > 2000 K throughout the entire operation cycle, and the time-averaged mean temperature is 2200 K.
It is well known from the equilibrium calculations of organic waste gasification [
25] that at temperatures ~900 K, carbon and oxygen exist as CO
2, tar and char, i.e., tar and char conversion is low; at temperatures above ~1200 K, in the presence of carbon, CO
2 breaks down to CO and available oxygen mostly reacts with carbon to form CO and CO
2 rather than with H
2 to form water; and at temperatures above ~1800 K tar and char are completely transformed to syngas composed mainly of H
2 and CO. According to
Table 1 and
Table 2 natural gas and waste oil contain comparable amounts of carbon (~95 and ~85%wt, respectively) in their composition, whereas wood sawdust contains only ~49%wt carbon and ~45%wt oxygen. Therefore, it is not that surprising that syngas compositions for natural gas and waste oil in
Figure 13 are close to each other in terms of H
2 and CO contents. As for wood sawdust, at high temperatures (above ~1200 K) the bound oxygen available in wood mostly reacts with carbon to form CO. In view of it, the amount of CO in the gasification products of sawdust is as high, as that in the gasification products of natural gas and waste oil.
It is worth noting that no condensed-phase by-products such as tar and char were detected in the gasification experiments under discussion. Additionally, there were no mineral residues. On the one hand, it is explained by the feedstocks used (natural gas, waste machine oil, and wood sawdust) containing nearly no ash. On the other hand, it is explained by high gasification temperature (well above 1200 K) and relatively long residence time (up to 15 s [
20]) of feedstocks in the gasifier.
It can be assumed that, at
f = 1 Hz, reactions (1) and (2) mainly proceed at a high local instantaneous temperature, for example, in the first quarter of the operation cycle, while during the rest of the cycle they proceed much more slowly. Since the median residence time of waste particles with a size of 0.1 or 1 mm in a 100 L spherical flow reactor is only several seconds [
20], then at a detonation pulse frequency
f = 1 Hz, only a quarter of the residence time (~0.25 s) is allotted for the rapid progress of gasification reactions. Moreover, since far from all particles reach the high-temperature zones during this time, it can be expected that the total conversion of carbon contained in the waste is relatively low under these conditions. On the contrary, at
f = 5 Hz, the rapid course of reactions (1) and (2) takes the entire cycle time, and a very high degree of carbon conversion can be expected.
Thus, the pulsed detonation gun technology developed and applied herein has several attractive features. First, it allows the production of gasification steam with a very high temperature (above 2000 °C) at atmospheric pressure, which is impossible with a boiler. When using such a steam for waste gasification, it becomes possible to obtain full carbon conversion to syngas containing only H2 and CO (with no by-products such as tar and char and therefore no expensive gas aftertreatment). Second, such a steam is obtained by shock compression without a need for heat transfer surfaces (accompanying losses are absent). Third, detonation steam, in addition to its thermal energy, possesses huge kinetic energy which can be used for creating intense vortical flows promoting gasification reactions in gasifiers, as well as for in situ feedstock fragmentation, separation of products with different densities, etc. Fourth, due to the intense vortical motion in a gasifier resembling the flow in a piston engine, the gasifier walls can be fabricated from cheap regular construction materials and can be water-cooled without much effect on the net rate of the gasification process (no need for applying expensive heat-resistant materials and/or refractory linings for gasifier walls). Fifth, feedstock parameters such as particle size distribution, moisture, composition, etc., seem to be much less significant than for other gasification technologies because strong detonation-induced shock waves and dense supersonic USS jets facilitate secondary fragmentation of particles and fast involvement of feedstock moisture in the gasification process. This means that the technology could be equally applicable to gasification of municipal waste fragmentation and gasification, lignin, sewage and industrial sludge gasification, coal and coal sludge residue gasification, gasification of toxic and nontoxic liquid (liquified) wastes, and toxic (e.g., medical) waste fragmentation and gasification. Sixth, the pulsed detonation gun technology promises to be cost effective, as only a small part (ideally, about 10%, see below) of produced syngas could be used for generating USS via pulsed detonations in mixtures with oxygen. The issues that still need to be addressed before technology implementation on an industrial scale are the noise and vibrations, as well as mechanical strength and wear of a pulsed detonation gun and gasifier materials.
5. Mass and Energy Balances
This section presents the ideal mass and energy balances for the pulsed detonation gun technology of organic waste gasification. For the sake of definiteness, we consider a pulsed detonation gun operating on the stoichiometric mixture of syngas (H
2/CO = 1) with O
2 diluted by 40%vol H
2O, and dry wood sawdust as a feedstock (see
Figure 1). According to [
6], due to the detonation of such a mixture in the pulsed detonation tube, high-temperature (~2300 K) gaseous detonation products, containing mainly H
2O and CO
2 with the H
2O/CO
2 ratio of 3/1, form according to overall reaction:
Table 3 shows the literature data on the standard heats of formation of relevant substances and latent heat of water vaporization. The heat of reaction (3) is equal to
These gaseous detonation products are further used as a gasifying agent for atmospheric-pressure gasification of biomass in a flow reactor. Full gasification of biomass with the formation of syngas CO + H2 with H2/CO = 1 is assumed to occur in the flow reactor. A part of generated syngas is compressed and directed back to the pulsed detonation tube, whereas the rest of generated syngas goes to an external syngas user. The task is to determine a part of syngas used for ones’ own needs and a part directed to the external user with due regard for energy requirements for oxygen and steam production, and syngas compression before entering the pulsed detonation tube.
Let us assume that the thermal energy of detonation products is completely recuperated by the cooling system to the energy of low-temperature steam entering the pulsed detonation tube as a diluent, i.e., irreversible losses are absent. Additionally, let us take into account that (1) the physical energy required for production of O
2 is 4 MJ/kg [
26], which is 12 MJ/kg with regard for production efficiency (33%), (2) the energy requirement for syngas compression from 0.1 to 0.5 MPa (before entering the pulsed detonation tube) is 3 MJ/kg, which is 9 MJ/kg with regard for compression efficiency (33%), and (3) the heat of formation of dry wood sawdust is ~5.43 MJ/kg [
27]. Let us consider the process with volumetric flow rates of CO and H
2 equal to 1 kmol/h. The results of calculations of mass and energy balances in these conditions are presented in
Table 4.
In summary, for converting 1 ton of dry sawdust one ideally needs 145 kg syngas, 155 kg O2, and 175 kg water. As a result of full gasification, one obtains 1000 + 145 + 155 + 175 = 1475 kg syngas, a part of which (145 kg, i.e., ~10%) is used for gasification of the next 1 ton of sawdust. The energy gain defined as the ratio of the total syngas energy after flow reactor (6430 MJ/h) to the energy spent in its production (1389 MJ/h) is 6430/1389 = 4.6.