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Biomass

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Biomass & Biofuels Socio-Economic Benefits Helps developing economies by promoting agrarian communities Increase in jobs Increase in trade balance (Indian perspective ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biomass


1
Biomass Biofuels
2
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3
Technology
  • Biomass technology today serves many markets
    that were developed with fossil fuels and
    modestly reduces their use
  • Uses - Industrial process heat and steam,
    Electrical power generation, Transportation fuels
    (ethanol and biodiesel) and other products.
  • Primary focus of the Biomass Program
    development of advanced technologies.

4
Current Focus
  • Platform technologies
  • Sugar Platform Technology
  • Thermochemical Platform Technology

5
Bio-refinery
  • A facility that integrates biomass conversion
    processes and equipment to produce fuels, power,
    and chemicals from biomass.
  • Analogous to today's petroleum refineries
  • It is based on the Sugar Platform and the
    Thermochemical Platform

6
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7
Bio-diesel
  • Made by transforming animal fat or vegetable oil
    with alcohol .
  • Fuel is made from rapeseed (canola) oil or
    soybean oil or recycled restaurant grease.
  • Directly substituted for diesel either as neat
    fuel or as an oxygenate additive

8
Modified Waste Vegetable Fat
  • Designed for general use in most compression
    ignition engines .
  •  The production of MWVF can be achieved in a
    continuous flow additive process.  
  • It can be modified in various ways to make a
    'greener' form of fuel

9
E-Diesel
  • Uses additives in order to allow blending of
    ethanol with diesel.
  • Ethanol blends of 7.7 to 15 and up to 5
  • Additives that prevent the ethanol and diesel
    from separating at very low temperatures or if
    water contamination occurs.

10
Jatropha
  • Biodiesel from Jatropha
  • Seeds of the Jatropha nut is
  • crushed and oil is extracted
  • The oil is processed and
  • refined to form bio-diesel.

11
Gaseous fuel Technology
12
Gasification Technology
  • Gobar gas Production
  • Biogas
  • Synthesis gas

13
Gasification
  • A process that uses heat, pressure, and steam to
    convert materials directly into a gas composed
    primarily of carbon monoxide and hydrogen.
  • Gasification technologies rely four key
    engineering factors
  • 1. Gasification reactor atmosphere (level of
    oxygen or air content).
  • 2. Reactor design.
  • 3. Internal and external heating.
  • 4. Operating temperature.

14
Gasification
  • Typical raw materials - coal, petroleum-based
    materials, and organic materials.
  • The feedstock is prepared and fed, in either dry
    or slurried form, into a sealed reactor chamber
    called a gasifier.
  • The feedstock is subjected to high heat,
    pressure, and either an oxygen-rich or
    oxygen-starved environment within the gasifier.

15
Raw Materials for Gasification
16
Gasification
  • Products of gasification
  • Hydrocarbon gases (also called syngas).
  • Hydrocarbon liquids (oils).
  • Char (carbon black and ash).
  • Syngas is primarily carbon monoxide and hydrogen
    (more than 85 percent by volume) and smaller
    quantities of carbon dioxide and methane

17
Gasifier Plant
18
Gasifier Plant
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20
Types of Gasifiers
  • Updraft Gasifier

21
Types of Gasifiers
  • Downdraft Gasifier

22
Types of Gasifiers
  • Twin-fire Gasifier

23
Types of Gasifiers
  • Crossdraft gas producers

24
Gobar gas
  • Gobar gas production is an anaerobic process
  • Fermentation is carried out in an air tight,
    closed cylindrical concrete tank called a
    digester

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27
Solid Fuel

28
Wood
  • Domestic heating with wood is still by far the
    largest market for bio-energy
  • Dramatic improvements of technology in domestic
    heating equipment
  • Improved tiled stoves, advanced logwood boilers,
    woodchip boilers, pellet boilers and pellet
    stoves.
  • Pourable wood-based fuel is also available

29
Woodchip boilers
30
Environmental Concerns
  • Air Pollution
  • Soil Deterioration

31
Air Concerns
  • Biomass processing technologies and biofuels use
    have the potential to increase emissions of ozone
    precursors
  • Increase in Nox emissions
  • Excessive inhalation of ethanol is harmful
  • Combustion of ethanol would result in increased
    atmospheric concentrations of carcinogens
  • Emission of relatively large sized particulate
    matter

32
Soil Concerns
  • Burning biomass deprives local eco-systems of
    nutrients
  • Production of dedicated energy crops renders
    land fallow
  • Reduced land availability for cattle grazing
  • Increased use of pesticides and fertilizers to
    produce energy crops contaminate ground and
    surface water
  • Affects fish and wildlife

33
Environmental Benefits
  • Reduction of waste
  • Extremely low emission of greenhouse gases
    compared to fossil fuels
  • Ethanol is Carbon neutral and forms a part of
    the carbon cycle
  • Growing variety of crops increases bio-diversity

34
Socio-Economic Benefits
  • Helps developing economies by promoting agrarian
    communities
  • Increase in jobs
  • Increase in trade balance (Indian perspective)
    due to lesser dependence on foreign resources

35
BIO FUELS
  • THE WORLD SCENARIO

36
BRAZIL
  • World leader in production and export of ethanol.
  • Ethanol produced per day equivalent to 200,000
    barrels of gasoline.
  • 24 blend ethanol mandatory.
  • Competitiveness
  • Bio diesel initiatives underway

37
U.S.A.
  • Ethanol a big boost to economy
  • E85 sells cheaper than gasoline
  • Currently production aimed at 4.5 Billion
    gallons/yr
  • MTBE phased out in many states
  • Soya bean main source of biodiesel

38
E.U.
  • Rapeseed main source of bio diesel
  • 3-15 blended petrol
  • France Bio diesel exempted from domestic tax
  • Germany Sales of bio diesel 99 million US
    gallons
  • Rise of SVO as domestic fuel

39
The Significant Others
  • China 3rd largest producer of ethanol producing
    220,000 tons of ethanol, exporting 90,000 tons in
    2000.
  • In southeast Asia, the Jatropha tree is used as a
    significant fuel source
  • Malaysia and Indonesia are starting pilot-scale
    production from palm oil.

40
India
  • Sources of ethanol
  • Sugarcane
  • Molasses
  • Agricultural waste
  • Low average cost of Rs.18/litre projected
  • Annual production capacity of 1.5 Billion litres

41
India (Contd.)
  • Sources of biodiesel
  • Honge
  • Jatropha
  • High capital, broad scale production plan
    initiated
  • Cost per liter projected at Rs. 27

42
Bio Mass
  • Biomass already supplies 14 of the worlds
    primary energy consumption. On average, biomass
    produces 38 of the primary energy in developing
    countries.
  • USA 4 of total energy from bio mass, around
    9000 MW
  • INDIA is short of 15,000 MW of energy and it
    costs about 25,000 crores annually for the
    government to import oil.

43
  • Bio Mass from cattle manure, agricultural waste,
    forest residue and municipal waste.
  • Anaerobic digestion of livestock wastes to give
    bio gas
  • Digester consumes roughly one third the power
    its capable of producing.
  • Fertilizers as by product.
  • Average electricity generation of 5.5kWh per cow
    per day!!

44
Thank You
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