This is a scholarly reference on the subject:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960148104003830I can only see the abstract, but a quick check by you will show you that this is a common problem where ever biogas is produced. Even in the abstract, they address the problem more completely than you have in posting after posting. Did you actually read our forum rules? We can't teach you everything one posting at a time. Did you read the Wikipedia pages that
Burner: went and looked up for you? These are good starting points. That article has a good review, and its references would be good information too.
magnesium burn in atmosphere of carbon dioxide.
Mg+CO2→MgO+C
Now we can electrolyse the mixture :
MgO+H2O→Mg(OH)2
4OH−→O2+2H2O+4e−
Tried this method with my brother not feasible on large scale costly and needs time
So Needed any simpler method to do so
No you didn't. The electrolysis of a suspension of an insoluble hydroxide is not possible. Not at home. And I doubt you were able to melt a refectory material. If you tried this in an atmosphere of methane gas you would certainly not be posting, we would have just heard the explosion. Unless you have a pressure vessel with no oxygen, and are igniting the magnesium some other way. But that's not a home process.
Please don't do this -- make up random things, and claim to have done them. The internet is full of people claiming to have done things, when they really haven't. We here, on the Chemical Forums, are trying to be better than that.