Application of excessive animal manure to the land may cause some environmental problems such as eutrophication of surface
waters, degradation of ground water quality, and threats to human health. This paper reports an experimental study on
the technology of biomass gasification to treat animal waste by analyzing the effects of key operating parameters on gasification.
In this research, dairy manure from the University of Nebraska dairy farm was first collected and dried, and then gasified
in a fluidized-bed, laboratory-scale gasifier to generate syngas. The effects of three parameters, namely temperature,
steam to biomass ratio (SBR) and the equivalence ratio (ER), on the gasification were described by a Box–Behnken design
(BBD). Results showed that increasing the temperature favored the formation of all three combustible gases, but the composition
of each gas behaved differently according to the changing parameters. The lower heating value of the syngas varied
from 2.0 to 4.7 MJ m−3, indicating gasification could be used as a waste management option to produce bioenergy, and potentially
reduce problems associated with the disposal of animal waste.