Biomass energy in India
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Transcript of Biomass energy in India
INTRODUCTION
TO
ENERGY FROM BIOMASS PROCESSING
FOR INDIA
BIOMASS CONVERSION METHODS
BRIQUETTING
COMBUSTION OF SOLID BIOMASS
BIOMETHANATION [Biogas]
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Many different biomass feedstocks can be used to
produce solid, liquid and gas fuels. They include
crops specifically grown for bioenergy, and various
agricultural residues, wood residues and waste
streams. Their costs and availability vary widely.
Collection and transportation costs are often
critical.
Biomass Feedstocks
• Agricultural crops
• Bioenergy crops
• Agricultural residues
• Wood residues
• Waste streams
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Agricultural crops:
• Sugarcane, sugarbeet, corn, and sweet sorghum
(agricultural crops presently grown commercially for both
carbohydrate production and animal feeds.)
• Sugarcane, Corn and sweet sorghum are efficient at trapping
solar energy because they are all "C4" plants. They use special
biochemical pathways to recycle and trap carbon dioxide that is
lost through photorespiration.
• Sugarbeets are efficient because they store their carbohydrate
in the ground. Sugarcane was the basis for the World's first
renewable biofuel program in Brazil. Corn is the basis for the
present renewable ethanol fuel industry in the United States.
Conventional use of biomass as
low cost fuel for the poor
Before 1990s, nearly 75% of the rural Indians depended
on bio-fuels (firewood, agricultural residues, and cow
dung-cake) for 80% of their energy needs.
Similarly 25 – 30% of the urban poor, the slum dwellers
depended heavily on bio-fuels.
Why was biomass used? People’s purchasing power
was low, and commercial fuels like kerosene and LPG were
not available adequately/ not affordable.
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Objectives of Bio-energy Program: To make bio-energy a sustainable energy source & elevate its present status from the
‘poor man’s oil’ into a modern energy source, • Use advanced techniques to produce biomass renewably and • Convert it efficiently into electricity,
gaseous, liquid and processed solid fuels.
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INPUTS & TASKS FOR BIOMASS
UTILIZATION
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Biomass-Production-Biomass-residue-Conversion to biofuel
Plant biomass requires input of land, suitable soil and
climate, moisture, sunlight and intelligent human labour.
After applications for food, feed, fibre, frame-material,
feedstock for chemicals and organic feedback to soil _
biomass is usable for fuel.
Biomass can be converted to quality fuel after
preparatory operations like drying to reduce
moisture content, briquetting to obtain bigger
partical size or chopping to obtain smaller.
Biochemical & Thermochemical Processing of solid,
liquid and gas biomass is a technology that enables
energy recovery from biomass.
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EFFICIENTLY CONVERT BIOMASS ENERGY
TO A CONVENIENT END USE FORM
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RURAL BIOMASS COMBUSTION
RURAL DOMESTIC: COOKING
HEAT & STEAM: SMALL SCALE Processes
ELECTRICITY: Boiler-Steam turbine-
Generator
COGENERATION / COMBINED CYCLE
FOR PRODUCING PROCESS HEAT &
ELECTRICITY
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BIOMASS COMBUSTION-USES
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COMBUSTION PROCESS
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In India, briquettes are mostly made from
groundnut shell, cotton stalk, saw dust,
coffee husk, bagasse, mustard stalk and
press mud. While the Southern region of
India produces briquettes mostly from
groundnut shell and saw dust, Western and
Northern regions produce bagasse,
groundnut shell, cotton stalk, mustard stalk
and press mud briquettes.
Briquetting in India
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Briquetting continued
As a recent addition municipal solid waste is
also densified for use as fuel in process
industries (tea, tobacco, textile, chemical,
paper, starch, tyre re-treading, tiles, etc) for
thermal applications.
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Both the machines give briquettes with a density
of 1-1.2 gm/cc and are suitable as industrial solid
fuels.
The screw type machines provide briquettes with a
concentric hole that gives better combustibility and
is a preferred fuel.
These briquettes can also be more conveniently
deployed in small furnaces and even cook-stoves
than solid briquettes generated by a ram press.
Screw and Ram Press
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Ram press for briquetting
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COMBINED HEAT & POWER
STEAM INJECTED GAS TURBINE
INTERCOOLED STEAM INJECTED GAS
TURBINE
COMBINED CYCLE
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Murugappa Chettiar Research Centre,
Chennai
(Kindly approach them for permission to
Use this knowhow)
charcoal briquetting
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Muthaiya Chettiar Research Centre’s method of
charcoal briquetting
1. Locally available biomass (e.g., casuarina
leaf litter, sugarcane trash, rice husk, coir
pith, groundnut shells, etc)
2. Carbonizing chamber (furnace )
3. Binder (starch or cassava flour)
4. Mini Briquetting machine (10kg/hr)
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1.Collection of biomass: Collect the locally available
biomass, sort them, chop the large-size raw materials into
smaller pieces and dry at sunlight.
2. Carbonization: i. Designing the Furnace
• Outer drum : A 200lits. metal oil drum with the top cut out
and a 12" width x 10" height hole cut in the lower side
• Two iron rids (8”) has to be fixed at the bottom of the metal
drum running parallel from one side to the other side. This
iron rods act as base to support the stainless steel inner
drum.
• Inner drum : A 100lits stainless steel drum with proper lids
and six (3/8") holes at the bottom. The inner drum is placed
into the larger drum.
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MCRC’s method of charcoal briquetting [continued]
ii. Carbonizing the biomass
• The biomass is tightly packed into the
inner drum and fired for 45minutes to 1hr
(Depending upon the biomass) using
biomass.
• After firing, the carbonized biomass in the
inner drum has to collected and weighed. In
this method 30 % of carbonized char can be
obtained.
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3. Preparation of binder
The binder material is used for strengthening the briquettes
For every 100 kg of total weight of carbonized charcoal
powder, prepare a binder mixture by adding 5 to 6 kg of
starch or cassava flour to 60 - 100 litres of water (based on
the weight of the raw materials)
4. Mixing
Mix such that every particle of carbonised charcoal material
is coated with binder. It will enhance charcoal adhesion and
produce identical briquettes.
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5. Briquetting. The charcoal mixture is made
into briquettes either
manually or using machines. Pour the
mixture directly into the briquetting mold /
machine to form uniform-sized briquettes.
6. Drying and Packaging Collect the briquettes in a tray, dry them under the sunlight, pack them in plastic bags and seal
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General Characteristics of briquettes
Moisture : 7.1%-7.8%
Volatile Matter : 13.0%-13.5%
Fixed Carbon : 81.0%-83.0%
Ash : 3.7%-7.7%
Sulfur : 0.0%
Heating Value : 7,100-7,300 kcal/kg
Density : 970kg/m3
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