Thursday, July 28, 2022

A SHORT REVIEW BASED ON POWER GENERATION FROM WASTED MATERIAL FOR A SUSTAINABLE ENVIRONMENT

 INTRODUCTION


Biomass generates ten per cent of the energy in the world. The global market evaluation shows a 10% increase in energy provided by biofuels made from corn and sugarcane fermentation [1]. For environmental safety, it is advised that these two bio-based energy increases in a renewable and sustainable manner [1]. Biomass gasification is much more adaptable in terms of bio-feedstocks or trash to produce biofuels for cogeneration of electricity or heat [1]. Today, there is a lot of interest in generating power from waste products (garbage, municipal solid waste, industrial waste or others). Forest biomass is significant for commercial cooking and fibre production, as well as scientific research into ecosystem productivity, energy nutrient fluxes, and the creation of charcoal from wood strips for power generation. There are three categories of basic forms of technologies for waste to energy:

1.      Thermochemical conversion process

2.      Biochemical conversion

3.      Landfill



Incineration, pyrolysis, and gasification are examples of Thermochemical Conversion Processes. The incineration method is mostly used to destroy garbage in a furnace by using high temperatures to regulate combustion. Approximately 70% of the total waste mass and 90% of the total volume may be decreased with this procedure. It comes with everything you need, including energy recovery and pollution control. Pollutants in the air, such as SOx, COx, and NOx, are hazardous to the environment. The process burns at temperatures ranging from 750°C to 1000°C. Fast pyrolysis, flash pyrolysis, and conventional heating are three forms of pyrolysis that occur in the absence of air. Fast pyrolysis (850 - 1250K).

1.      Flash pyrolysis (1050 - 1300K)

2.      Conventional pyrolysis (550 - 900K)

Gasification is a technique that converts Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) into CO2, CO2, and H2O by reacting it at high temperatures [3]. The technique produces hydrocarbons in addition to methane due to the reactor design and operating temperature. Finally, there are important contaminants such as char, ash, and tar. When compared to the alternatives, the biochemical conversion approach is more environmentally benign. Microorganism enzymes are used in the process. It's also broken down into sections:

1.      Conversion from anaerobic to aerobic

2.      Conversion to an aerobic state

3.      Composting

Microorganisms degrade into biodegradable compounds at 65 degrees Celsius in these methods. Biogas is produced as a result of the reduced amount of waste, which may be used for combined heat and power and as a transportation fuel. Incineration or gasification are used to dispose of the residues. When compared to the landfill process, this approach creates two to four times the amount of methane.


BIOMASS CHARACTERIZATION:

Cellulose: It is a polymeric carbohydrate or polysaccharide with a high molecular weight and a maximum of 10k monomeric units of D-glucose, linked by β-1,4-glycosidic bonds [4]. Cellulose is a polymeric organic compound that can be found in nature in 90% to 50% cotton and wood structure and processing a cell walls of plants [4].

Hemicellulose: It is the major constituent of cell walls and consists of heterogeneously branched polysaccharides which is engaged with microfibrils surface. The content and structure of hemicellulosic are different depending on the type of material of the plant. Temperature dependency of hemicellulosic group 180˚C to 360˚C, thereby producing non-condensable gas, coal, and a variety of ketones, aldehydes, acids, and furans.

·        Xylans: It is another structure of plant cell walls that is similar to xylans. It is composed of D-xylose as a monomeric unit with traces of L-arabinose.

·        Mannas:   It includes mannan, galactomannan, glucomannan, glucuronic acid mannan, etc.

Lignin: It is also contained a plant cell wall, with the function of binding, cementing, and putting fibres together to enhance the compactness and resistance of the plant structure. The content of lignin plant species is 25 to 30 % in ebony hardwoods of 50%), 61-65% carbon, 5-6% hydrogen, oxygen 1-2% approx.

Components of Lignocellulosic Biomass

It is the type of waste material from the agriculture sector like wheat straw, wheat bran, rice straw, corn stover and sugarcane bagasse etc. contains biomolecules like lignin (C81H92O28), hemicellulose (C5H8O4)m and cellulose (C6H10O5)n is the core part. Cellulose is the major part of the production of biofuels.

 

 


COMPOSITIONS:

Feedstocks

Cellulose %

Hemicellulose %

Lignin %

Rice straw

23.47

19.27

9.90

Wheat straw

34.20

23.68

13.88

Barley straw

33.25

20.36

17.13

Corn straw

42.60

21.30

15.10

Oat straw

31.0-35.0

20.0-26.0

10.0-15

Corncobs

33.7-41.2

31.9-36.0

6.1-15.9

Tea waste

30.20

19.9

40

Sunflower

48.8

34.6

17

Nutshell

25-30

25-30

30-40

Olive husk

24

23.6

48.4

Hardwood

44-55

24-40

18-25

Grasses

25-40

35-50

10-30

 

Table 1: Compositional analysis of biomass

 

BIOMASS CLASSIFICATION:

1.      Woody and Non-woody biomass

2.      Herbaceous biomass, aquatic biomass

3.      Biomass mixtures

4.      Materials from Municipal solid waste

5.      Disposals

6.      Rotten biomass mixtures

7.      Dry and wet biomass

 

STUDIES ON WASTE TO ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES:

Waste is biomass or weight of rotten substances in form of carbon, hydrogen, sulfur, oxygen, nitrogen, volatile matter, fixed carbon, moisture, Ash, and the rest of the acidic contents. Some part of renewable sources of energy and by replacing fossil fuels could substantially limit their environmental impacts. The parameters are determined by thermal conversion with a suitable technique for producing energy/electricity. The contents of biomass play an important role like calorific values, fixed carbon, ash, metal, cellulose etc.  The main types of energies are:

1.      Transportation fuels.

2.      Heat energy

Biomass needs to pass through the pre-treatment process first with Biological, chemical, and mechanical methods.

NAME OF POWER GENERATION PLANTS

DESCRIPTION

Hydroelectric power plants

No fuel, wind source or water currents. External turbine blades use to apply torque for rotating shafts for an alternator. Ex. Hoover Dam.

Solar power plants

The electricity generated by photovoltaic panels energizes silicon cells by sunlight source. The electron generator cells are connected with electrical load, therefore electricity generated

Geothermal power plants

Piped dipped into the earth (near magma). The water turns into the stream turbine and produces electricity. Ex. Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

Gas-fired power plant

Air is drawn into the compressor then the air-fuel mixture is ignited. The combustion causes the turbine blades to spin. The spinning motion is transmitted to an alternator which is converted into electricity.

Diesel-fired power plant

Reciprocating engines for power generation

Coal-fired power plants

The fuel source is fired up to heat water In the boiler, it turns into steam and then travels in a steam turbine which creates electricity.

Nuclear power plants

Once nuclear fission is initiated, the fuel rods heat the water present in the reactor vessel, creating steam. This steam then goes on to spin a steam turbine and electric alternator set, creating electricity.

 

Table 2: Types of power plants

BENEFITS -

·        Nuclear power plants generate maximum electricity within low fuel negligible emission but wastage is a major issue.

·        Gas turbines are more efficient and it's better than steam-based power plants but tend to be expensive to maintain.

·        Reciprocating engines have great flexibility, and speed the working process and it's very efficient in low cost to maintain.

·        Wind power plant never generates emissions directly.

·         Gas turbines and reciprocating engines are well suited for this and a popular option among power companies. 

Currently, renewable sources of energy or technologies heart-to-heart overcome other power generation plants. Biomass technologies (pyrolysis, gasification, combustion). Low-cost method, environmental roots, and economic distribution in the current scenario. Low power generation in a variety of raw materials is awaited. Carbon is the most un-favourable amount withdrawn by electricity generation. Biofuel overcomes the advantage justified category with carbon neutral. Biofuels are made up of organic materials such as crops, agricultural waste, and used oils. It either comes in solid, liquid, gases forms and leads to a variety of use for electricity generation ex. Biodiesel.

 

SECTIONS FOR PRODUCTION OF BIOMASS ENERGY POWER FROM BIOMASS:

·        Sources of raw materials and selection based on the requirement.

·        Biomass preparation system.

·        The biomass transportation system.

·        A generation or co-generation units.

·        Complex transformer sub-station.


GASIFICATION:

It is the most important aspect of the procedure [6]. Gasification takes place at a high temperature (600-1000 C) in the weak oxidizing agent. Air, steam, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, and carbon are all oxidising agents. The bigger waste material decomposes into smaller molecules, leaving ash, char, and tar as minor pollutants. However, char and tar yield a wide range of products, implying partial conversion. Thermogravimetric analysis or weight loss destruction was used in past research to determine the kinetics of various biomass resources such as rice, straws, chips, husk, and so on. The degradation reflects or continuously lowers biomass (lignin, hemicellulose, and cellulose). Below is the overall gasification equation [6].

CHxOy (biomass) + O2 (21% of air) + H2O (steam) = CH4 + CO + CO2 + H2 + H2O (Unreacted steam) + C (Char) + tar

2C + O2 = 2CO (partial oxidation reaction)

C + O2 = CO2 (Complete oxidation reaction)

C + 2H2 = CH4 (hydrogasification reaction)

CO + H2O = CO2 + H2 (water gas shift reaction)

CH4 + H2O = CO + 3H2 (steam reforming reaction)

C + H2O = CO + H2 (water gas reaction)

C + CO2 = 2CO (Boudourd reaction)


ESTIMATES ON ENERGY CONVERSION:

According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), global energy conversion has increased by 65.79 per cent in the previous 22 years, with total supply accounting for 4.39 per capita CO2 emissions (IEA). [Report 2022- At around this time in 2022, IEA members contribute 60 million barrels of oil to Russia]. The world's current electricity consumption rate (TWh) is 129.67 per cent. Furthermore, the renewable energy sector is expected to rise from 2.6 million to 3.4 million people in 2022, with a global trend from biomass to electricity generation. One of the most effective ways to duplicate technology is to generate derived goods from biomass.

CONCLUSION:

Lighting households, industry, and domestic light for décor are all met by electricity generation. Such power facilities are ineffective in supplying low-cost electricity. India produces over 10,000 million tonnes of waste. Because of the absence of infrastructure and the high expense of developing a biomass-to-electricity plant, no authority authorizes it. In some regions, electricity generation power plants using MSW (municipal solid waste) are available, which create electricity at a greater capacity. Biomass gasification has a higher capacity for CO2 emission reduction. Biomass gasification, among other alternative energy conversion pathways, produces reliable and efficient solutions for fine goods and fuel and chemical conversions. Biomass energy may be used to decarbonise in the future, and it can also be used to ignore Delhi's concerns in India. The strong environment enables technological innovation to expand growth and reduce the occurrence of difficulties. More livelihoods are created as a result of unwavering efforts. More investment in the fields is attracted by cost-effective technology. It should be emphasised more in order to decrease global warming.


REFERENCES:

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7.      Wang, Lijun, et al. "Contemporary issues in thermal gasification of biomass and its application to electricity and fuel production." Biomass and bioenergy 32.7 (2008): 573-581.

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