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      Biomass-based chemical looping technologies: the good, the bad and the future

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          Abstract

          This review article focuses on the challenges and opportunities of biomass-based chemical looping technologies and explores fundamentals, recent developments and future perspectives.

          Abstract

          Biomass is a promising renewable energy resource despite its low energy density, high moisture content and complex ash components. The use of biomass in energy production is considered to be approximately carbon neutral, and if it is combined with carbon capture technology, the overall energy conversion may even be negative in terms of net CO 2 emission, which is known as BECCS (bioenergy with carbon capture and storage). The initial development of BECCS technologies often proposes the installation of a CO 2 capture unit downstream of the conventional thermochemical conversion processes, which comprise combustion, pyrolysis or gasification. Although these approaches would benefit from the adaptation of already well developed energy conversion processes and CO 2 capture technologies, they are limited in terms of materials and energy integration as well as systems engineering, which could lead to truly disruptive technologies for BECCS. Recently, a new generation of transformative energy conversion technologies including chemical looping have been developed. In particular, chemical looping employs solid looping materials and it uniquely allows inherent capture of CO 2 during the conversion of fuels. In this review, the benefits, challenges, and prospects of biomass-based chemical looping technologies in various configurations have been discussed in-depth to provide important insight into the development of innovative BECCS technologies based on chemical looping.

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          Energy production from biomass (Part 1): Overview of biomass.

          The use of renewable energy sources is becoming increasingly necessary, if we are to achieve the changes required to address the impacts of global warming. Biomass is the most common form of renewable energy, widely used in the third world but until recently, less so in the Western world. Latterly much attention has been focused on identifying suitable biomass species, which can provide high-energy outputs, to replace conventional fossil fuel energy sources. The type of biomass required is largely determined by the energy conversion process and the form in which the energy is required. In the first of three papers, the background to biomass production (in a European climate) and plant properties is examined. In the second paper, energy conversion technologies are reviewed, with emphasis on the production of a gaseous fuel to supplement the gas derived from the landfilling of organic wastes (landfill gas) and used in gas engines to generate electricity. The potential of a restored landfill site to act as a biomass source, providing fuel to supplement landfill gas-fuelled power stations, is examined, together with a comparison of the economics of power production from purpose-grown biomass versus waste-biomass. The third paper considers particular gasification technologies and their potential for biomass gasification.
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            An overview of the chemical composition of biomass

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              Progress in Chemical-Looping Combustion and Reforming technologies

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                EESNBY
                Energy & Environmental Science
                Energy Environ. Sci.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                1754-5692
                1754-5706
                2017
                2017
                : 10
                : 9
                : 1885-1910
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Environment
                [2 ]Tsinghua University
                [3 ]Beijing 100084
                [4 ]China
                [5 ]Key Laboratory for Solid Waste Management and Environment Safety
                [6 ]Department of Chemical Engineering
                [7 ]Columbia University
                [8 ]New York
                [9 ]USA
                [10 ]Lenfest Center for Sustainable Energy
                [11 ]Imperial College London
                [12 ]London
                [13 ]UK
                [14 ]Key Laboratory of Energy Thermal Conversion and Control of Ministry of Education
                [15 ]School of Energy and Environment
                [16 ]Southeast University
                [17 ]Nanjing
                [18 ]William G. Lowrie Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
                [19 ]The Ohio State University
                [20 ]Columbus
                Article
                10.1039/C6EE03718F
                347b9336-66e5-4859-9674-f049dc0a1767
                © 2017
                History

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