Diesel production by fast pyrolysis of miscanthus giganteus, well-to-pump analysis using the greet model
Article (Published version)
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In this paper "well-to-pump" environmental analysis of pyrolytic diesel from Miscanthus gigantheus is performed. The average annual yield of Miscanthus from III-V year of cultivation on 1 ha of chernozem soil in Serbia (23.5 t) is considered as an input for the process. Two pyrolytic diesel pathways are considered: distributed pyrolytic pathway with external hydrogen production (from natural gas) and integrated pyrolytic pathway with internal hydrogen production (from pyrolytic oil). and are compared to a conventionally produced diesel pathway. The results of the analysis reveal that integrated-internal pyrolytic diesel pathway has lowest resources consumption and lowest pollutant emissions. Compared to conventionally produced diesel, integrated-internal pyrolysis pathway consumes 80% less of fossil fuels, and 92% more of renewables, has 90% lower global warming potential, 30% lower terrestrial acidification potential but 38% higher particulate matter formation potential. Compared to t...he distributed-external pathway, 88% less fossil fuels, and 36% less renewables are consumed in the integrated-internal pathway, global warming potential is 97% lower, terrestrial acidification is 20% lower, and particulate matter formation is 49% lower. Nevertheless, this pathway has high coal and hydroelectrical power consumption due to electricity production and high emissions of particulate matter, CO2, SOx, and N2O. Another drawback of this production pathway is the low yield of diesel obtained (38% lower than in distributed-external pathway). With this regard, it is still hard to designate production of diesel from fast pyrolysis of Miscanthus as a more environmentally friendly replacement of the conventional production diesel pathway.
Keywords:
diesel / pyrolysis / Miscanthus / life cycle assessmentSource:
Thermal Science, 2019, 23, 1, 365-378Publisher:
- Univerzitet u Beogradu - Institut za nuklearne nauke Vinča, Beograd
Funding / projects:
- Development and improvement of technologies for energy efficient and environmentally sound use of several types of agricultural and forest biomass and possible utilization for cogeneration (RS-42011)
- Fluidized bed combustion facility improvements as a step forward in developing energy efficient and environmentally sound waste combustion technology in fluidized bed combustors (RS-33042)
- Geochemical investigations of sedimentary rocks - fossil fuels and environmental pollutants (RS-176006)
DOI: 10.2298/TSCI171215113P
ISSN: 0354-9836
WoS: 000460088000031
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85057093922
Institution/Community
Tehnološko-metalurški fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Perić, Milica AU - Komatina, Mirko AU - Avtonijević, Dragi Lj. AU - Bugarski, Branko AU - Dželetović, Željko PY - 2019 UR - http://TechnoRep.tmf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4202 AB - In this paper "well-to-pump" environmental analysis of pyrolytic diesel from Miscanthus gigantheus is performed. The average annual yield of Miscanthus from III-V year of cultivation on 1 ha of chernozem soil in Serbia (23.5 t) is considered as an input for the process. Two pyrolytic diesel pathways are considered: distributed pyrolytic pathway with external hydrogen production (from natural gas) and integrated pyrolytic pathway with internal hydrogen production (from pyrolytic oil). and are compared to a conventionally produced diesel pathway. The results of the analysis reveal that integrated-internal pyrolytic diesel pathway has lowest resources consumption and lowest pollutant emissions. Compared to conventionally produced diesel, integrated-internal pyrolysis pathway consumes 80% less of fossil fuels, and 92% more of renewables, has 90% lower global warming potential, 30% lower terrestrial acidification potential but 38% higher particulate matter formation potential. Compared to the distributed-external pathway, 88% less fossil fuels, and 36% less renewables are consumed in the integrated-internal pathway, global warming potential is 97% lower, terrestrial acidification is 20% lower, and particulate matter formation is 49% lower. Nevertheless, this pathway has high coal and hydroelectrical power consumption due to electricity production and high emissions of particulate matter, CO2, SOx, and N2O. Another drawback of this production pathway is the low yield of diesel obtained (38% lower than in distributed-external pathway). With this regard, it is still hard to designate production of diesel from fast pyrolysis of Miscanthus as a more environmentally friendly replacement of the conventional production diesel pathway. PB - Univerzitet u Beogradu - Institut za nuklearne nauke Vinča, Beograd T2 - Thermal Science T1 - Diesel production by fast pyrolysis of miscanthus giganteus, well-to-pump analysis using the greet model EP - 378 IS - 1 SP - 365 VL - 23 DO - 10.2298/TSCI171215113P ER -
@article{ author = "Perić, Milica and Komatina, Mirko and Avtonijević, Dragi Lj. and Bugarski, Branko and Dželetović, Željko", year = "2019", abstract = "In this paper "well-to-pump" environmental analysis of pyrolytic diesel from Miscanthus gigantheus is performed. The average annual yield of Miscanthus from III-V year of cultivation on 1 ha of chernozem soil in Serbia (23.5 t) is considered as an input for the process. Two pyrolytic diesel pathways are considered: distributed pyrolytic pathway with external hydrogen production (from natural gas) and integrated pyrolytic pathway with internal hydrogen production (from pyrolytic oil). and are compared to a conventionally produced diesel pathway. The results of the analysis reveal that integrated-internal pyrolytic diesel pathway has lowest resources consumption and lowest pollutant emissions. Compared to conventionally produced diesel, integrated-internal pyrolysis pathway consumes 80% less of fossil fuels, and 92% more of renewables, has 90% lower global warming potential, 30% lower terrestrial acidification potential but 38% higher particulate matter formation potential. Compared to the distributed-external pathway, 88% less fossil fuels, and 36% less renewables are consumed in the integrated-internal pathway, global warming potential is 97% lower, terrestrial acidification is 20% lower, and particulate matter formation is 49% lower. Nevertheless, this pathway has high coal and hydroelectrical power consumption due to electricity production and high emissions of particulate matter, CO2, SOx, and N2O. Another drawback of this production pathway is the low yield of diesel obtained (38% lower than in distributed-external pathway). With this regard, it is still hard to designate production of diesel from fast pyrolysis of Miscanthus as a more environmentally friendly replacement of the conventional production diesel pathway.", publisher = "Univerzitet u Beogradu - Institut za nuklearne nauke Vinča, Beograd", journal = "Thermal Science", title = "Diesel production by fast pyrolysis of miscanthus giganteus, well-to-pump analysis using the greet model", pages = "378-365", number = "1", volume = "23", doi = "10.2298/TSCI171215113P" }
Perić, M., Komatina, M., Avtonijević, D. Lj., Bugarski, B.,& Dželetović, Ž.. (2019). Diesel production by fast pyrolysis of miscanthus giganteus, well-to-pump analysis using the greet model. in Thermal Science Univerzitet u Beogradu - Institut za nuklearne nauke Vinča, Beograd., 23(1), 365-378. https://doi.org/10.2298/TSCI171215113P
Perić M, Komatina M, Avtonijević DL, Bugarski B, Dželetović Ž. Diesel production by fast pyrolysis of miscanthus giganteus, well-to-pump analysis using the greet model. in Thermal Science. 2019;23(1):365-378. doi:10.2298/TSCI171215113P .
Perić, Milica, Komatina, Mirko, Avtonijević, Dragi Lj., Bugarski, Branko, Dželetović, Željko, "Diesel production by fast pyrolysis of miscanthus giganteus, well-to-pump analysis using the greet model" in Thermal Science, 23, no. 1 (2019):365-378, https://doi.org/10.2298/TSCI171215113P . .