Gasifier Design

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CHAPTER III DESIGN METHODOLOGY 3.

1 INTRODUCTION

This chapter covered the design method use in this project. The design of a primary gasifier was considered for this project. The gasifier design is for low power production that can be used across the slump and rural dwellers of the country. The design is a simple but unique design that is easy to set up and used. The design of any product is complex as its a matrix of several alternatives: the cost of production, performance index, manufacturability and ease to assemble, modelling time etc. For this project, due to the time factor, a simulated project was considered instead of the fabricated work.

3.2

CAD MODELS OF GASIFIER

It was decided that the main body of the gasifier would be divided into 3 pieces of pipes for easy fabrication of the internal parts. These three sections would be top cylinder (fuel chamber), middle cylinder (reaction chamber) and bottom cylinder (ash chamber). For reliability, longer life and experimentation, it was planned to build with stainless steel. Drawing for different parts and the full gasifier were developed with Solidworks automated mechanical design suite.

3.2.1

Top Part or Fuel Burner

The top cylinder was made of 4.2 mm thick, 158mm outer diameter and 200mm length stainless pipe. It contained bunker and pyrolysis zones. Biomass feedstock dried here due to the convective and radiation heat transfer from the lower parts of the gasifier. A conical tube of 2.5 mm thick stainless steel was placed inside to avoid fuel bridging. The capacity of the fuel chamber is approximately 5 kg of dry waste.

Figure 3.1: Solidworks Model of Top Part.

3.2.2 Middle Part or Reaction Chamber The Middle part is the heart of the gasifier where the syngas is produced. It contains the oxidation zone and the throat section. Fuels flow down by gravity. The middle cylinder was made of 6.3 mm thick, 219.1 mm outer diameter and 320 mm long stainless steel pipe. Inside this chamber there was a slab of thermal resistant concrete to provide insulation around hot zone. There were 4 holes in middle of the slab for the air supply nozzles. Two flanges were mounted at the top and bottom to be attached to other chambers.

Figure 3.2

Solidworks Model of Middle Part

Figure 3.3: Solidworks Model of throat section.

Generally, two methods were applied to obtain an even high temperature distribution. Firstly, reducing the cross sectional area at a certain height (throat concept) and spreading the air inlet nozzles over the reduced cross sectional area. The throat section was made of two concentric stainless steel pipes of 70 and 88 mm diameter with annular plates. The whole assembly seemed like a pocket and gave the facility to change the depth of the throat pipe to modify the distance between the nozzles and the top of the reduction zone in the simplest way. The gas outlet pipe was made of 70mm SS pipe.

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