Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
207807 Fuel 2007 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Basic research on fuel gas production from nascent coal volatiles was conducted in a two-stage fixed-bed reactor. The volatiles from coal carbonization decomposed in the reactor. Indonesian natural limonite ore dramatically promoted coal volatile decomposition at 873–1023 K in ambient pressure and the carbon yields, except in tar, were above 97.8%. We compared these results to experiments without a catalyst. Subsequently, coal tar converted more completely and more than twice the amount of methane-rich product gases were obtained using the limonite catalyst. In addition, catalyst sulphur poisoning was scarcely observed in the H2S–H2–N2 (H2S/H2: 0.002–0.004) system at 923 K.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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