Knowledge Base

Syngas — Composition, Energy, and the Self-Sustaining Loop

Draft High Research 3,388 words Created Mar 3, 2026

What Syngas Is

Syngas -- short for synthesis gas -- is a gaseous mixture composed primarily of hydrogen (H2) and carbon monoxide (CO), with smaller amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), water vapor, and trace compounds. The name "synthesis gas" comes from its original industrial use: as a feedstock for synthesizing other chemicals, particularly liquid fuels via the Fischer-Tropsch process (developed in 1920s Germany) and methanol.

Syngas forms when any carbon-containing material is heated to high temperatures in a low-oxygen or oxygen-free environment. Instead of combustion (which requires excess oxygen and produces CO2 and water), the limited oxygen causes partial oxidation and thermal decomposition, breaking complex molecules into their simplest gaseous components. The two dominant reactions are:

  • Partial oxidation: C + 1/2 O2 -> CO
  • Water-gas reaction: C + H2O -> CO + H2
At the extreme temperatures of plasma gasification (5,000-15,000 degC at the plasma arc), molecular dissociation is essentially complete. Every organic molecule -- regardless of its original structure -- is broken down into individual atoms that recombine as H2 and CO. This is why plasma gasification produces cleaner, higher-quality syngas than lower-temperature processes: there is no molecular complexity left to form tars, heavy hydrocarbons, or partially-reacted intermediates.


Syngas from Plasma Gasification of Plastic

Composition Data

The most comprehensive recent study on plasma gasification of plastic waste (ACS Omega, 2024) reports the following syngas composition:

ComponentVolume %Role
H2 (hydrogen)43.86%Primary fuel component, highest energy per mass
CO (carbon monoxide)30.93%Secondary fuel component, feeds Fischer-Tropsch
CO2 (carbon dioxide)~10-15%Inert diluent, reduces heating value
CH4 (methane)~3-5%Additional fuel value
Other (N2, H2O, traces)BalanceDepends on plasma gas and feedstock moisture
H2/CO ratio: 1.42 -- This is significant. A ratio near 2.0 is ideal for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis of liquid fuels; 1.42 is close enough to be usable with minor adjustment via water-gas shift reaction (CO + H2O -> CO2 + H2). For direct combustion in engines or turbines, the ratio is irrelevant -- both H2 and CO burn.

Energy Content

MetricValueSource
Syngas LHV (plastic waste feedstock)13.88 MJ/Nm3ACS Omega 2024
Syngas LHV (biomass feedstock)10.23 MJ/Nm3ACS Omega 2024
Syngas LHV (air gasification, general)6-8 MJ/Nm3ScienceDirect review
Syngas LHV (steam gasification)>15 MJ/Nm3ScienceDirect review
System output efficiency81%ACS Omega 2024
Natural gas LHV (comparison)36 MJ/Nm3Standard reference
Plastic-derived syngas at 13.88 MJ/Nm3 has roughly 36% higher heating value than biomass-derived syngas. This is because plastics (polyethylene, polypropylene) are hydrogen-rich hydrocarbons with energy content comparable to crude oil (46 MJ/kg for PE vs 42-47 MJ/kg for crude). The feedstock is already energy-dense; plasma gasification converts ~81% of that energy into the syngas stream.

How Ocean Plastic Feedstock Affects Syngas Quality

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is dominated by four polymer types, each affecting syngas differently:

PolymerGPGP ShareH ContentEnergy (MJ/kg)Syngas Impact
Polyethylene (PE)~35-40% (by mass)14.3%46.3Excellent -- high H2 yield, clean decomposition
Polypropylene (PP)~20-25%14.3%46.4Excellent -- nearly identical to PE
Nylon (PA6/PA66)~15-20% (fishing nets)9.7%31.0Good -- lower H2 yield, nitrogen content produces some NH3
Polystyrene (PS)~5-10%7.7%41.9Good -- aromatic structure, slightly more CO relative to H2
PVC~2-5%4.8%18.0Problematic -- chlorine produces HCl (see Contaminants)
PET~3-5%4.2%22.7Fair -- oxygen content reduces energy yield
Net assessment: GPGP feedstock is favorable for syngas production. The PE/PP dominance (55-65% of mass) means the bulk of the feedstock is the highest-energy, cleanest-burning polymer available. Nylon fishing nets add nitrogen contamination (producing NH3 in the syngas, which must be scrubbed) but still have good energy content. PVC is the primary concern due to chlorine, but its low proportion (2-5%) keeps HCl levels manageable.

Ocean-specific penalties:

  • Salt (NaCl): Does not participate in gasification reactions at plasma temperatures. Reports to the vitrified slag. May cause minor electrode corrosion if not pre-washed.
  • Water content: Energy penalty of ~2,260 kJ/kg to vaporize. At 30% moisture, adds ~157 kWh/tonne drying cost. Waste heat from the reactor can offset this.
  • Marine biofouling: Barnacles, algae, and microorganisms add a small biomass fraction. At plasma temperatures, these simply add to the syngas (biomass gasifies readily). Net impact: negligible.

Energy Content and Power Generation

Conversion Pathways: Syngas to Electricity

Three primary technologies convert syngas into electrical power, each with different efficiency profiles and suitability for a floating platform:

TechnologyElectrical EfficiencyOverall Efficiency (CHP)Scale RangeMaturity for SyngasMarine Suitability
Reciprocating gas engine25-37%80-90% (with heat recovery)0.1-10 MWProven (Jenbacher, GE)Good -- compact, tolerant of roll/pitch
Gas turbine30-40%70-85% (with HRSG)1-100+ MWProven (GE, Siemens)Excellent -- used on ships, oil platforms
Combined cycle (gas + steam)45-55%80-90%10-500+ MWProven for syngas IGCCComplex, better for large fixed installations
Solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC)45-60%85-90%0.1-10 MWEmerging for syngasPromising but early-stage
SOFC + gas turbine hybrid52-65%85-95%1-50 MWResearch stageFuture potential
For The Claw prototype (1-5 TPD): Reciprocating gas engines (e.g., Jenbacher syngas engines) are the most practical choice. They are compact, tolerant of variable syngas composition, proven on waste-derived syngas, and achieve 25-37% electrical efficiency with up to 90% total efficiency when waste heat is recovered for feedstock drying and station heating.

For full-scale Claw (50-100 TPD): Gas turbines become viable and preferable. Their higher power density, lower maintenance per MWh, and proven marine track record (gas turbines power naval vessels and offshore platforms) make them the natural choice. At this scale, combined-cycle configurations could push electrical efficiency above 50%.

What "480% Surplus Energy" Means in Practice

The Blue Diesel study (PNAS, 2021) -- conducted by researchers at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and Harvard University -- modeled the thermodynamic feasibility of converting collected ocean plastic into liquid fuel aboard a cleanup vessel.

Key findings:

MetricValue
Surplus fuel energy at GPGP high-density zones480% more than collection requires
Process usedHydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) at 300-550 degC, 250-300 bar
Oil yield from mixed PE/PP85% at 400 degC
Plastic mass in GPGP~79,000 tonnes
Annual removal per ship230-12,000 tonnes depending on concentration
Break-even plastic loading12-25% of collected volume (varies by polymer)
"480% surplus" means that at the highest plastic concentrations in the GPGP (2,500 g/km2), the fuel energy produced from collected plastic is 4.8 times greater than the total energy required to collect it -- including ship propulsion, processing equipment, shredders, pumps, and round-trip transit. This eliminates the need for any fossil fuel: the cleanup vessel runs entirely on the trash it collects, with enough surplus fuel left over for return trips and resupply voyages.

While the Blue Diesel study used HTL rather than plasma gasification, the fundamental energy argument applies equally. Plasma gasification of the same PE/PP feedstock produces syngas with comparable total energy recovery (81% system efficiency). The critical takeaway is that ocean plastic contains vastly more energy than is needed to collect and process it.


Syngas Uses Beyond Power Generation

Fischer-Tropsch Synthesis (Syngas to Liquid Fuels)

The Fischer-Tropsch (FT) process converts syngas (CO + H2) into liquid hydrocarbons over metal catalysts (iron or cobalt) at 150-300 degC and moderate pressures (10-40 bar). Products include:

  • Diesel fuel -- zero sulfur, high cetane number, burns cleaner than petroleum diesel
  • Jet fuel / sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) -- growing demand, premium pricing
  • Naphtha -- petrochemical feedstock
  • Waxes -- specialty products
Optimal H2/CO ratio for FT: 2.0-2.1 (cobalt catalyst) or 1.5-1.7 (iron catalyst). Plasma syngas at H2/CO = 1.42 is slightly hydrogen-lean for cobalt but workable with iron catalysts or after water-gas shift adjustment.

Relevance to The Claw: High. A floating platform could convert syngas into marine diesel for its own use and for resupply vessels. FT diesel from ocean plastic is the definition of circular economy -- trash becomes fuel that powers trash collection. The equipment footprint is moderate (a compact FT reactor has been demonstrated at shipping-container scale by companies like Velocys).

Hydrogen Extraction

Syngas can be converted to pure hydrogen via:

1. Water-gas shift reaction: CO + H2O -> CO2 + H2 (converts CO to additional H2) 2. Pressure swing adsorption (PSA): Separates H2 from CO2 and other gases at 99.999% purity

This is the basis of most industrial hydrogen production today. The process is mature, well-understood, and scalable.

Relevance to The Claw: Moderate to high. Hydrogen has value as:

  • Fuel cell feedstock for high-efficiency power generation
  • Export commodity (the emerging hydrogen economy)
  • Potential fuel for supply vessels (hydrogen-powered ships are in development)
The hydrogen economics analysis in this knowledge base (see node 05: Economics) explores whether producing hydrogen at sea could generate revenue to fund operations.

Methanol Synthesis

Syngas converts to methanol (CH3OH) over copper/zinc catalysts at 250-270 degC and 50-100 bar:

CO + 2H2 -> CH3OH

Methanol is a versatile chemical building block and fuel. Global methanol demand exceeds 100 million tonnes/year.

Relevance to The Claw: Low for a prototype, moderate long-term. Methanol synthesis requires precise H2/CO ratios and clean syngas. More relevant if The Claw scales to a permanent industrial platform.

Ammonia Production

Hydrogen extracted from syngas can react with atmospheric nitrogen via the Haber-Bosch process to produce ammonia (NH3). Ammonia is the basis of fertilizer production and is being explored as a carbon-free shipping fuel.

Relevance to The Claw: Low. Ammonia synthesis requires high pressure (150-300 bar) and specialized catalysts. Not practical on a floating platform at foreseeable scales.

Summary: What Makes Sense on a Floating Platform

Use CasePracticality at SeaPriority
Direct electricity generationHigh -- gas engines/turbines are proven marine techPhase 1
Fischer-Tropsch dieselModerate -- compact reactors existPhase 2-3
Hydrogen productionModerate -- PSA units are container-sizedPhase 2-3
Methanol synthesisLow-Moderate -- requires stable operationsPhase 3+
Ammonia productionLow -- too complex for floating platformNot recommended

Contaminants and Cleanup

Raw syngas from ocean plastic gasification contains impurities that must be removed before use in engines, turbines, or chemical synthesis. The specific contaminant profile depends on the feedstock.

Expected Contaminants from Ocean Plastic

ContaminantSourceConcentration ConcernEffect if Not Removed
HCl (hydrogen chloride)PVC plastic (~2-5% of GPGP mass)ModerateCorrodes turbine blades, poisons catalysts
H2S (hydrogen sulfide)Sulfur in additives, marine organismsLow-ModerateCorrodes metals, poisons FT catalysts
NH3 (ammonia)Nylon (polyamide) decompositionModerate (nylon is 15-20% of feedstock)NOx emissions if burned, catalyst poison
ParticulatesInorganic residues, entrained slag dropletsLow-ModerateErosion of turbine blades, fouling
TarsIncomplete decomposition of heavy organicsVery low (plasma advantage)Fouling, deposits, catalyst deactivation
Heavy metalsPigments, stabilizers, marine contaminationLowEnvironmental concern, catalyst poison
Alkali metals (Na, K)Sea salt contaminationModerateHot corrosion of turbine components

Why Plasma Temperatures Help

This is one of plasma gasification's decisive advantages over conventional gasification and pyrolysis. At conventional gasification temperatures (700-1,500 degC), tar formation is a major problem -- complex hydrocarbons partially decompose but recondense into sticky, fouling tar compounds. Tar content can reach 10-70+ g/Nm3 in conventional gasifiers, requiring expensive secondary cracking or cleanup.

At plasma temperatures (5,000-15,000 degC at the arc, 1,500-5,000 degC in the reactor bulk), tars are thermally cracked to extinction. The residence time at these temperatures ensures complete molecular dissociation. Studies confirm that plasma gasification produces syngas with tar levels orders of magnitude lower than conventional gasification -- effectively zero in well-designed systems. This eliminates what is normally the most difficult and expensive syngas cleanup challenge.

Cleanup Train for Ocean Plastic Syngas

A practical syngas cleanup system for The Claw would include:

StageMethodTarget ContaminantRemoval Efficiency
1. QuenchWater spray cooling (1,000 degC -> 200 degC)Particulates, alkali condensation>90% particulates
2. Cyclone separatorCentrifugal particle removalCoarse particulates, entrained slag>95% of particles >10 um
3. Wet scrubberNaOH or Na2CO3 solution sprayHCl, NH3, fine particulates82-97% HCl, >95% NH3
4. Acid gas removalAmine scrubbing (MDEA) or ZnO bedsH2S, COS>97% H2S
5. Activated carbon bedSulfided carbon adsorptionMercury, trace heavy metals>90% mercury
6. Final filterCeramic candle filters or bag filtersRemaining fine particulates>99.9% of particles >1 um
Space and weight on a platform: The cleanup train is a modest installation. A 5-10 TPD system fits within a 20-40 foot equipment skid. The chemicals consumed (NaOH, amine solvent, activated carbon) are standard industrial supplies delivered during routine resupply.

PVC management: At 2-5% PVC in the feedstock, HCl production is roughly 20-50 kg per tonne of mixed ocean plastic processed. The wet scrubber neutralizes this to sodium chloride (table salt) solution, which can be discharged to the ocean. If PVC content is higher than expected, pre-sorting PVC-rich items (identifiable by markings and rigidity) before gasification reduces HCl load.


The Self-Sustaining Energy Loop

This is the core of The Claw's feasibility argument. The energy loop works as follows:

Ocean Plastic (30-40 MJ/kg)
        |
        v
   [Shredder/Dryer] <-- waste heat from reactor
        |
        v
   [Plasma Gasifier] <-- electricity from generators (below)
        |
        v
   Syngas (13.88 MJ/Nm3) + Vitrified Slag
        |
        v
   [Gas Cleanup Train]
        |
        v
   Clean Syngas
        |
        v
   [Gas Engine/Turbine Generator] --> Electricity
        |                                |
        |                                +--> Powers plasma torches
        |                                +--> Powers shredders, conveyors
        |                                +--> Powers collection systems
        |                                +--> Powers dewatering
        |                                +--> Powers station operations
        |                                +--> SURPLUS (54%+ at Utashinai)
        v
   Waste Heat --> Feedstock drying, station heating

Real-World Proof: Utashinai Plant

The Eco-Valley plasma gasification plant in Utashinai, Japan (operational 2003-2013) provides the best published energy balance data for a plasma gasification facility:

MetricValue
Capacity200-220 TPD (designed), ~300 TPD (peak, 2007)
FeedstockMunicipal solid waste + auto shredder residue
Gross electricity generated7.9 MW
Electricity consumed internally3.6 MW (46%)
Electricity exported to grid4.3 MW (54%)
Plasma torches8 Westinghouse torches (2 gasification islands x 4)
The plant exported 54% of its generated electricity to the Japanese power grid. It consumed only 46% internally for plasma torches, gas cleanup, material handling, and facility operations. This was with MSW feedstock at 10-15 MJ/kg energy content. Ocean plastic at 30-40 MJ/kg has 2-4x the energy density, meaning syngas yields per tonne would be proportionally higher.

The plant closed in 2013 not due to technical failure but because Japan's increasing recycling rates reduced the available waste feedstock below economic viability. The technology worked; the business case changed.

Energy Balance for The Claw

From the Energy Balance article in this knowledge base, the scenarios show:

ScaleDaily GenerationDaily ConsumptionSurplusSurplus %
Prototype (5 TPD)~13,800 kWh~8,200 kWh+5,600 kWh+68%
Full scale (100 TPD)~275,700 kWh~67,700 kWh+208,000 kWh+307%
Pessimistic (100 TPD, 35% ocean penalty)~179,200 kWh~67,700 kWh+111,500 kWh+165%
Even in the pessimistic scenario with a 35% energy penalty for wet, salty feedstock, the system produces 165% more electricity than it consumes. The surplus powers collection vessels, communication systems, crew quarters, and navigation equipment -- with energy to spare.


Comparison with Other Process Outputs

Syngas vs. Bio-Oil (Pyrolysis) vs. Heat (Incineration)

AttributeSyngas (Gasification/Plasma)Bio-Oil (Pyrolysis)Heat (Incineration)
Primary outputH2 + CO gas mixtureLiquid hydrocarbon oilSteam/hot gas
Energy formChemical (gas)Chemical (liquid)Thermal
StorageCompressed gas tanks or immediate useStandard liquid fuel tanksCannot be stored (must use immediately)
TransportPiped or compressedPumped like dieselN/A
Electrical conversionGas engine, turbine, fuel cellDiesel engine, boiler+turbineSteam turbine only
Chemical feedstock useFT fuels, methanol, hydrogen, ammoniaUpgraded to diesel, chemical feedstockNone
Conversion efficiency81% of feedstock energy to syngas60-75% to oil + gas + char65-80% to steam
Electrical efficiency25-55% (engine to combined cycle)30-40% (diesel engine)20-30% (steam turbine)
Feedstock flexibilityAny carbon material, mixed, wet, dirtyRequires sorted, dry, clean inputMixed waste acceptable
Toxic byproductsNone (vitrified slag is inert)Tar, wastewater, heavy metals in charFly ash, bottom ash, dioxins, heavy metals
Handles PVC/chlorineYes (HCl scrubbed from syngas)Poorly (chlorine contaminates oil)Partially (dioxin risk)

Why Syngas Is the Most Versatile Output

1. Multiple end uses: Syngas can generate electricity, produce liquid fuels, extract hydrogen, or synthesize chemicals. Bio-oil is limited to combustion or upgrading. Heat can only make steam.

2. Feedstock agnosticism: Syngas quality is relatively consistent regardless of input material. Mixed PE, PP, nylon nets, PS, PET -- all produce H2 + CO. Bio-oil quality varies dramatically with feedstock composition and requires sorting.

3. No toxic residue: The byproduct is vitrified slag (see below), not toxic ash. Incineration produces fly ash containing dioxins, furans, and heavy metals requiring hazardous waste disposal.

4. Scalable conversion: Gas engines and turbines are proven marine technology available at any scale from 100 kW to 100+ MW. Bio-oil engines are less common and require fuel processing. Steam turbines need boiler infrastructure.

5. Energy density preservation: At 81% system efficiency, plasma gasification preserves more of the feedstock energy than pyrolysis (60-75%) or incineration (65-80% thermal, but only 20-30% electrical).


Vitrified Slag -- The Other Output

Plasma gasification produces two outputs: syngas (the energy product) and vitrified slag (the solid residue). Understanding both is essential.

What It Is

When inorganic material in the feedstock (metals, glass, minerals, salt, sand) passes through the plasma reactor, temperatures above 1,500 degC melt it into a molten pool at the reactor base. On cooling, this solidifies into vitrified slag -- a dense, dark, glass-like solid similar to obsidian.

Properties

PropertyValue
AppearanceDark, glassy, dense solid
Density2.5-3.0 g/cm3
PorosityVery low
LeachabilityNon-leaching (passes TCLP testing)
Heavy metal encapsulationLocked within glass matrix
Chemical stabilityInert across pH range
Compressive strengthHigh -- suitable as structural aggregate

Why It Matters

No toxic ash. This is the fundamental difference between plasma gasification and incineration. Incineration produces two toxic waste streams:

  • Bottom ash: Contains heavy metals, requires landfill disposal
  • Fly ash: Contains dioxins, furans, heavy metals; classified as hazardous waste requiring specialized disposal at significant cost
Plasma gasification produces zero toxic ash. All inorganics are vitrified -- heavy metals are chemically locked within the glass matrix and cannot leach out, even in marine environments. The slag passes Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure (TCLP) tests, meaning it is classified as non-hazardous.

Disposal and Use Options for The Claw

OptionFeasibilityNotes
Ocean disposalLegally complex but physically safeSlag is inert and non-leaching. Functionally equivalent to dropping rocks in the ocean. Regulatory approval would be needed under the London Convention.
Stockpile for shore deliverySimpleAccumulate slag onboard, offload during resupply visits
Construction aggregateCommercial valueProven substitute for gravel in concrete and road sub-base
Sandblasting mediaCommercial valueComparable to standard blast media
Artificial reef substrateEnvironmental benefitInert glass provides hard surface for coral/marine organism attachment
Volume estimate: At 100 TPD of ocean plastic, slag production is approximately 5-10% of input mass (most ocean plastic is organic with minimal inorganic content). That is 5-10 tonnes/day of slag -- roughly 2-4 cubic meters. Manageable for onboard storage between resupply cycles.


Key Takeaways for The Claw

1. Syngas is the right output for a floating platform. It is the most versatile energy carrier from waste processing, can be burned in proven marine engines/turbines, and enables the self-sustaining energy loop that eliminates the need for fuel resupply.

2. Ocean plastic is excellent syngas feedstock. PE/PP dominance means high hydrogen content, high energy density, and clean decomposition. The feedstock is better than typical municipal waste.

3. The energy loop closes. Real-world data (Utashinai: 54% surplus) and thermodynamic modeling (Blue Diesel: 480% surplus at high concentrations) both confirm that processing ocean plastic produces far more energy than the process consumes.

4. Contaminants are manageable. PVC-derived HCl, nylon-derived NH3, and salt are handled by standard industrial scrubbing equipment. Plasma temperatures eliminate the tar problem that plagues conventional gasification.

5. Vitrified slag is a solved problem. The solid byproduct is inert, non-toxic, non-leaching, and has commercial value. Unlike incineration ash, it creates no disposal liability.

6. Phase 1 should use gas engines for simplicity. Gas turbines and combined cycle for Phase 2+. Fuel cells and Fischer-Tropsch synthesis become relevant at full scale.


Sources