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Conversion of Wet Biomass to Hydrogen by Unmixed Reforming

 

DOE Grant No. DE-FG03-00ER86116

                                                         Amount:  $500,000

 

Small Business

EERGC Corporation

18 A Mason Drive

Irvine, CA 92618

Dr. Richard K. Lyon, Principal Investigator

rlyonheart@worldnet.att.net 

Mr. Wyman Clark, Business Official

wclark@eergc.com 

949-768-3756

Research Institution

University of North Dakota

P.O. Box 9018

Grand Forks, ND 58202-9018

 

Wet biomass is a potentially valuable energy resource but it cannot be shipped economically.  If wet biomass could be converted to hydrogen, the hydrogen could be used in fuel cells to provide electricity and space heating to farms and other rural facilities.  However, the only presently available technology for this conversion, steam reforming, is not economical for small installations.  This project will adapt a new technology, unmixed reforming, for the economical conversion of wet biomass at small facilities.  In Phase I, an existing fluid bed reactor system was used for a bench scale demonstration of the technology.  Wet saw dust and wet switch grass were converted to 95+% pure hydrogen at a rate sufficient to power a fuel cell with a 1.4 kilowatt output.  An analysis of process thermodynamics showed that a water content of up to 50% in the feed had no adverse effect on the process.  A cost analysis showed that this technology compared very favorably with other technologies now under development.  In Phase II, a prototype that can produce hydrogen from biomass at a very attractive price will be built and demonstrated.

 

Commercial Applications And Other Benefits as described by the awardee: This technology should provide cheap rural electric and space heating with zero use of fossil fuels and zero emissions of CO2 or other pollutants.