Production of hydrogen-rich syngas via biomass-methane co-pyrolysis: Thermodynamic analysis

Haiyan Guo, Zhiling Wang, Kang Kang, Dongbing Li

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Abstract

This study presents a thermodynamic equilibrium analysis of hydrogen-rich syngas production via biomass–methane co-pyrolysis, employing the Gibbs free energy minimization method. A critical temperature threshold at 700 °C is identified, below which methanation and carbon deposition are thermodynamically favored, and above which cracking and reforming reactions dominate, enabling high-purity syngas generation. Methane addition shifts the reaction pathway towards increased reduction, significantly enhancing carbon and H2 yields while limiting CO and CO2 emissions. At 1200 °C and a 1:1 methane-to-biomass ratio, cellulose produces 50.84 mol C/kg, 119.69 mol H2/kg, and 30.65 mol CO/kg; lignin yields 78.16 mol C/kg, 117.69 mol H2/kg, and 19.14 mol CO/kg. The H2/CO ratio rises to 3.90 for cellulose and 6.15 for lignin, with energy contents reaching 43.16 MJ/kg and 52.91 MJ/kg, respectively. Notably, biomass enhances methane conversion from 25% to over 53% while sustaining a 67% H2 selectivity. These findings demonstrate that syngas composition and energy content can be precisely controlled via methane co-feeding ratio and temperature, offering a promising approach for sustainable, tunable syngas production.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2695
Number of pages16
JournalPolymers
Volume17
Issue number19
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Oct 2025

Keywords

  • biomass-methane co-pyrolysis
  • hydrogen-rich syngas
  • thermodynamic equilibrium analysis
  • Gibbs free energy minimization

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