[Gasification] Emerging wood to biogasoline technology
Greg and April
gregandapril at earthlink.net
Sat Mar 29 21:14:35 CDT 2008
Could be little bit of all three, depending on the specifics.
Each has it's own pluses and minuses, and the final process will depend on
the particular economics and supplies of the area.
The turkey/chicken offal plant was based on a combination of wet pyrolysis
and catalytic reforming, but produced something like a slightly thicker than
normal diesel as an end product, but it could be further broken down for
light fractions if needed.
Greg H.
----- Original Message -----
From: <MMBTUPR at aol.com>
To: <KatahdinEnergyWorks at verizon.net>; <gasification at listserv.repp.org>
Sent: Saturday, March 29, 2008 18:14
Subject: Re: [Gasification] Emerging wood to biogasoline technology
> from Lewis L Smith
>
> Biogasoline ! Fascinating.
>
> Is this a gasification, pyrolysis or reforming process or what ?
>
> Frank, please elaborate and keep us up to date.
>
>
> Cordially.
>
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