Title: WOOD 120 Bio-energy
1WOOD 120Bio-energy
2The Bio-Buzzwords
- Bio-energy
- Bio-mass
- Bio-fuels
- Bio-diesel
3Past practice in BC
Beehive burners
Sawmill waste (hog fuel) was burned without
capturing heat value. Now sawmill waste is
burned to heat the dry kilns.
4Forms of Energy
- Electricity
- Transportation fuel
- Heat
5Forms of Energy
6Fossil fuels (the simple slide)
CO2
Fossil Fuels
7Bioenergy (the simple slide)
reduce
8Bioenergy (the more complicated slide)
9Bioenergy drivers
- Climate change
- Shortages of traditional energy sources
- Costs of traditional energy sources
- Energy security
- Landfill reduction
- Mountain Pine Beetle (BC-specific)
10Biomass sources
- Grain
- Straw
- Grass
- Sugar cane (bagasse)
- Wood (lignocellulose)
11Wood vs. other cellulosic biomasses
- Longer storage life and lower storage costs
- Higher bulk density
- Less intensive use of water and fertilizer in its
growth - Established collection system exists
12Transportation
13Energy density of materials
14Bioenergy technology platforms
- Wood pellets
- Gasification
- Bio-ethanol
- Direct combustion
15Bio-fuel status in BC
www.energyplan.gov.bc.ca
16Wood Pellets
- Sawmill waste extruded into small pellets.
- Either burned directly for heat value or for
generation of electricity - Used domestically (N.A.) and industrially (Europe)
17Wood Pellets
- Waste may be ground to consistent, fine size.
- Pressed through pelletizer to consolidate.
- Pellets are held together by natural adhesive
in wood (lignin). - Pellets are denser than starting material.
18Wood Pellet Stove
- 1 Hopper
- 2 Convection fan
- 3 Auger
- 4 Ash pan
- 5 Igniter
- 6 Heat exchange tubes
- 7 Burn chamber
www.pelprostoves.com/images/pelpro-cutaway.jpg
19Pellet plants in BC (2011)
- 8 plants
- 787,000 tonnes production
- Plant capacity56-186,000 tonnes
- Used 2.2 million m3 of wood residues
- 10 of global market
20Liquid biofuels
- Bio-ethanol (one example)
- Currently produced from grain (in NA)
- Blended with gasoline
- Gasolineethanol 9010
- Reduces carbon monoxide emissions
21Wood Chemistry
22Bioethanol from wood waste
Burn
Solidresidue
Solid material
Newproducts?
Pre-treatment
Wood
Sugars insolution
Alcohol
Fermentation
23Comparsion of bio-fuel feedstocks
24Conversion of biomass sources
LIGNOCELLULOSE
STARCH
SUGAR
Pretreatment
Pretreatment
Pretreatment
Fractionation
Fractionation
Fractionation
Lignin
Cellulose
Hemicellulose
Extractives
EnzymaticHydrolysis
EnzymaticHydrolysis
Pentoses
Hexoses
Hexoses
Hexoses
Fermentation
Fermentation
Fermentation
Recovery
Recovery
Recovery
BIOFUELS
BIOENERGY
BIOPRODUCTS
25Bio-ethanol from wood
- Wood is hard to break downinto chemical
components - High cost of enzymes
- Products need to bedeveloped utilizing solid
residue (lignin) - Rate of development of technology is influenced
by price of oil
26Gasification
- Burns biomass with controlled amount of oxygen
- Converts biomass into carbon monoxide and
hydrogen - Results in syngas which is itself a fuel
www.nexterra.ca/i_mages2/Gasifier.jpg
27Gasification
- Cleaner and more efficient technology than direct
conversion of biomass - Syngas can be burned on site (for production of
electricity) or transported (increase in energy
density)
http//www.sc.edu/usctimes/articles/2005-02/images
/gasification.jpg
28Gasification plant at UBC
- Opened in September 2012
- 25,000 tonnes of urban wood waste per year from
Metro Vancouver - Generation of steam and electricity
- Low pressure steam (15 reduction of natural gas
used for heating on UBC campus) - Electricity generation (2MW, demonstration scale)
- GHG reduction of 5,000 tonnes/year
29Gasification plant at UBC
Photo credits Don Erhardt
30Gasification plant at UBC
(Nexterra)
31Electricity generation
Raw material ?
32Cogeneration plant
- Williams Lake, BC
- Established in 1993
- 60 MW capacity
- Electricity feeds into BC Hydro grid
- Burns wood waste (600,000 tonnes/year)
- 4-5 local sawmills provide wood waste
(combined capacity of 1 billion fbm) - High efficiency combustion
33Looking back and forward??
34Current Status of Bio-Energy Technologies
Gasification
35Bio-energy - issues
- Government policies (e.g., tax credits? RD
incentives?) - Competing green technologies (e.g., wind, wave,
geothermal) - Competing bio-energy technology platforms still
being developed - Competing new fosil fuel capcaity in North
America - Food vs. Fuel vs. Fibre