Title of article
Assessment of energy use and carbon footprint for low-rank coal-based oxygen-thermal and electro-thermal calcium carbide manufacturing processes
Author/Authors
Mi، نويسنده , , Yue and Zheng، نويسنده , , Danxing and Guo، نويسنده , , Jing and Chen، نويسنده , , Xiaohui and Jin، نويسنده , , Peng، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
11
From page
305
To page
315
Abstract
Research of calcium carbide production is of great importance to the utilization of coal. In order to assess and compare two different calcium carbide processes, oxygen-thermal calcium carbide manufacturing process system (OTMP) and electro-thermal calcium carbide manufacturing process system (ETMP) were established in which processed middle coke (PMC) refined from low-rank coal was used as feedstock. Two systems that have significantly different process conditions and multi-product characteristics are difficult to assess comprehensively and objectively by using traditional energy and exergy analysis methods, thus new indexes were proposed. The two systems were analyzed by using three new multi-product system indexes, namely, multi-product comprehensive energy consumption, multi-product comprehensive exergy consumption, and multi-product comprehensive carbon emission. The analysis shows that the percentages of all three indexes of OTMP are lower than those of ETMP at 56.47%, 39.02%, and 79.08%, respectively. Unlike the assessment of energy and exergy consumption, carbon footprint analysis indicates that OTMP has significantly better environmental performance.
rbon footprint flow diagram analysis proposed in this study suggests that indirect emission caused by material processing and utilitiesʹ utilization accounts for most of the total carbon emission in both systems. Direct emissions from OTMP and ETMP are only 0.92% and 0.38%, respectively, of the total carbon emission.
tudy suggests that from the point of view of a multi-product chemical process, OTMP is characterized by low energy consumption, exergy consumption, and carbon emission. Thus, a key point in developing OTMP as an alternative technique for calcium carbide production is determining whether high-purity CO produced in OTMP can be used effectively as a product.
Keywords
multi-product , Oxygen-thermal calcium carbide production , Thermodynamic analysis , Electro-thermal calcium carbide production , Low-rank coal , Carbon emission
Journal title
Fuel Processing Technology
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Fuel Processing Technology
Record number
1507600
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