Bioenergy for power generation, transportation and climate change mitigation /
"Version: 20230401"--Title page verso.Includes bibliographical references.part I. Introduction to bioenergy. 1. Renewable energy and biomass -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. The energy use sectors -- 1.3. Energy flow--from primary to end-use energy -- 1.4. Global primary energy and total final energy consumption -- 1.5. Share of renewable energy in the global final energy consumption -- 1.6. Share of renewable energy in global electrical power generation -- 1.7. Global share of biomass energy2. Introduction to solid biomass--properties and use -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. Energy in biomass -- 2.3. Forms of solid biomass feedstock -- 2.4. Energy uses of solid biomass -- 2.5. The important properties of woody biomass -- 2.6. Energy-moisture relations -- 2.7. Density-moisture relations -- 2.8. Pre-treatment and densification of biomass3. Thermal and thermochemical conversion of solid biomass -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Pathways for biomass conversion -- 3.3. Combustion -- 3.4. Pyrolysis -- 3.5. Gasification -- 3.6. Summary of thermochemical processes and products4. Chemical, biochemical and electrochemical conversion of biomass -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Chemical conversion of biomass -- 4.3. Biochemical conversion of biomass through respiration -- 4.4. Anaerobic digestion and methane fermentation -- 4.5. Electrochemical conversion of biofuelspart II. The physics and technology of bioenergy use. 5. The thermodynamics of heat engines -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. Heat engine--basic concepts -- 5.3. Basic concepts of thermodynamics -- 5.4. Principle of operation of the heat engine -- 5.5. Heat engine power cycles -- 5.6. Types of heat engines -- 5.7. The Rankine cycle and the steam turbine -- 5.8. The Brayton cycle and the gas turbine6. Bioenergy-based power generation technology -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Principles of operation of thermal power plants -- 6.3. Types of thermal power plants -- 6.4. Combined cycle power plants -- 6.5. Bioenergy-fired thermal power plants in industrial application7. Electrochemical conversion and storage of energy -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. Types of fuel cells -- 7.3. Types of batteries -- 7.4. Battery research and developmentpart III. Liquid and gaseous biofuels for transportation and power generation. 8. Introduction to liquid biofuels -- 8.1. Introduction -- 8.2. Types of biofuels -- 8.3. Global production of biofuels -- 8.4. Engine fuel properties and standards9. Bioethanol and biobutanol -- 9.1. Introduction -- 9.2. Bioethanol -- 9.3. Biobutanol10. Biodiesel, biogas and biomethane -- 10.1. Introduction -- 10.2. Biodiesel -- 10.3. Biogas and biomethane11. Emerging fuels for transport and power -- 11.1. Introduction -- 11.2. HVO--a better biofuel for diesel engines -- 11.3. Syngas--a gas for many applications -- 11.4. The FTS process--synthetic fuels for conventional engines -- 11.5. Pyrolysis oil--new fuel for sea transport and power generation -- 11.6. Hydrogen--green fuel for EVs and storagepart IV. Energy, climate change and an integrated global policy framework for development. 12. Drivers and threats to global renewable energy production -- 12.1. Introduction -- 12.2. Who are the stakeholders in global energy? -- 12.3. Energy and global conflicts -- 12.4. The role of fossil fuel subsidies -- 12.5. New drivers for global RE production13. Climate change and future energy technology -- 13.1. Introduction -- 13.2. The net zero by 2050 ultimatum from the UNFCCC -- 13.3. The science behind climate change -- 13.4. COP26 and the global energy transition -- 13.5. The energy transition--an Australian case study -- 13.6. COP2714. Energy, pandemics and an integrated global development plan -- 14.1. Introduction -- 14.2. Global poverty, the MDGs and the SDGs -- 14.3. Energy and economic well-being -- 14.4. Addressing global crises and disasters -- 14.5. An integrated approach to the global challenges.Understanding bioenergy and climate change mitigation requires knowledge of several disciplines, from thermodynamics in the study of power generation to biochemistry and policy in the case of biofuels and energy trade. The first three parts of this book provide the scientific and technical background for the production and use of bioenergy. They consider the chemistry, biochemistry and physics of the production and use of solid, liquid and gaseous biofuels. The fourth part describes the political forces that drive and deter renewable energy production on the global scale, and demonstrates how global politics and economics combine with climate change policy to produce the energy transition. The book will be invaluable for graduate researchers, academics and climate change scientists, and decision-makers in the energy industry. Part of IOP Series in Renewable and Sustainable Power.Researchers and practitioners in the fields of renewable energy, climate change and environmental protection; students of postgraduate biomass and biofuels courses.Also available in print.Mode of access: World Wide Web.System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader, EPUB reader, or Kindle reader.Anirudh Singh (PhD) is an Adjunct Professor at the University of Southern Queensland. He was a Professor in Renewable Energy at the University of Fiji from 2017-2021 and was at the University of the South Pacific from 2001-2017, where he managed two major capacity-building projects (Project DIREKT and Project L3EAP) in renewable energy within international EU-funded collaborations. With 22 years of university teaching/administration experience, Professor Singh has published two books (including Talking Renewables published by IOP Concise Physics), 14 book chapters, more than 60 papers in international journals and has made more than 50 presentations in 11 countries over the last 20 years.Title from PDF title page (viewed on May 2, 2023).
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