Climate Impact Comparison of Biomass Combustion and Pyrolysis with Different Applications for Biochar Based on LCA
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology and Data
- Biomass collection: Biomass, such as wood chips, straw, animal waste, and crop residues, is collected from agricultural or forestry sources;
- Preparation: The collected biomass is cleaned, sorted, and processed to remove any impurities;
- Conversion: The biomass is converted into energy through combustion chambers;
- Energy production: The converted energy is used to produce electricity and heat via steam turbines.
- The process in biomass pyrolysis unit typically involves the following steps:
- Pre-treatment: This involves drying and grinding the biomass feedstock to the desired particle size;
- Pyrolysis reactor: The biomass is then fed into a pyrolysis reactor, which is heated to the desired temperature and held at that temperature for a specific period;
- Condensation: The volatile gases and liquids produced during the pyrolysis process are cooled and condensed into a liquid bio-oil;
- Filtration: The bio-oil is filtered to remove any contaminants or particles;
- Char production: The remaining solid char is further processed for use as fuel or biochar.
3. Results
3.1. Potential Climate Impacts of Various Systems
3.2. Sensitivity Analysis on the Pyrolysis Temperature
4. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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SE | IT | PL | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Waste collection | ton.km | 20 | 10 | 10 |
Waste transport | ton.km | 70 | 50 | 50 |
CHP of biomass | Input biomass | kg | 1.6 | [40] |
Output heat | MJ | 9.87 | [40] | |
Output electricity | kWh | 1 | [40] | |
Flue gas | kg | CO2: 2.56 CO: 0.00035 H2: 0.8 × 10−5 NO: 0.0003 | [40] | |
Preparation & Pyrolysis | Input biomass | kg | 3.13 | [40] |
Output biochar | kg | 0.92 | [40] | |
Input electricity | kWh | 0.0907 | [41] | |
Input heat | MJ | 0.676 | [41] | |
Saving emissions by biochar (as avoided product) | KgCO2eq/kg (hard coal production) | GWP: 1.04 | [37] | |
Avoided product added to soil | Carbon content in biochar (%) | 74.5 | ||
Stable carbon content in biochar (%) | 64.8 | |||
C-CO2 conversion coefficient | 3.67 | |||
Reduction in N-fertilizer (kg) | 0.00027 | [31] | ||
Reduction in P-fertilizer (kg) | 0.000054 | |||
Reduction in K-fertilizer (kg) | 0.000027 | |||
Fixed carbon from crop yield increase (kg CO2eq) | 0.051 | |||
Fixed carbon from reduced SOC mineralization (kg CO2eq) | 0.28 | |||
CHP for biofuel (after pyrolysis) | Output heat | MJ | 11.94 | [40] |
Output electricity | kWh | 1 | [40] | |
Flue gas | kg | CO2: 1.7 CO: 0.00012 H2: 0.12 × 10−4 NO: 0.0005 | [40] |
T = 350 °C | T = 500 °C | T = 650 °C | |
---|---|---|---|
Biochar (kg) | 0.296 | 0.264 | 0.138 |
Electricity (kWh) | 0.319 | 0.396 | 0.555 |
Heat (MJ) | 3.8 | 4.8 | 6.26 |
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Safarian, S. Climate Impact Comparison of Biomass Combustion and Pyrolysis with Different Applications for Biochar Based on LCA. Energies 2023, 16, 5541. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16145541
Safarian S. Climate Impact Comparison of Biomass Combustion and Pyrolysis with Different Applications for Biochar Based on LCA. Energies. 2023; 16(14):5541. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16145541
Chicago/Turabian StyleSafarian, Sahar. 2023. "Climate Impact Comparison of Biomass Combustion and Pyrolysis with Different Applications for Biochar Based on LCA" Energies 16, no. 14: 5541. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16145541
APA StyleSafarian, S. (2023). Climate Impact Comparison of Biomass Combustion and Pyrolysis with Different Applications for Biochar Based on LCA. Energies, 16(14), 5541. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16145541