Abstract

In the sustainability context, the performance of energy-producing technologies, using different energy sources, needs to be scored and compared. The selective criterion of a higher level of useful energy to feed an ever-increasing demand of energy to satisfy a wide range of endo- and exosomatic human needs seems adequate. In fact, surplus energy is able to cover energy services only after compensating for the energy expenses incurred to build and to run the technology itself. This paper proposes an energy sustainability analysis (ESA) methodology based on the internal and external energy use of a given technology, considering the entire energy trajectory from energy sources to useful energy. ESA analysis is conducted at two levels: (i) short-term, by the use of the energy sustainability index (ESI), which is the first step to establish whether the energy produced is able to cover the direct energy expenses needed to run the technology and (ii) long-term, by which all the indirect energy-quotas are considered, i.e., all the additional energy requirements of the technology, including the energy amortization quota necessary for the replacement of the technology at the end of its operative life. The long-term level of analysis is conducted by the evaluation of two indicators: the energy return per unit of energy invested (EROI) over the operative life and the energy payback-time (EPT), as the minimum lapse at which all energy expenditures for the production of materials and their construction can be repaid to society. The ESA methodology has been applied to the case study of H2 production at small-scale (10–15 kWH2) comparing three different technologies: (i) steam-methane reforming (SMR), (ii) solar-powered water electrolysis (SPWE), and (iii) two-stage anaerobic digestion (TSAD) in order to score the technologies from an energy sustainability perspective.

Highlights

  • The appearance of certain ground-breaking technologies significantly shaped societal metabolism

  • The energy sustainability analysis (ESA) methodology has been applied to the case study of H2 production at small-scale (10–15 kWH2) comparing three different technologies: (i) steam-methane reforming (SMR), (ii) solar-powered water electrolysis (SPWE), and (iii) two-stage anaerobic digestion (TSAD) in order to score the technologies from an energy sustainability perspective

  • The produced energy for SMR, SPWE, and the first stage (S1) of the TSAD corresponds to the energy contained in the produced H2, for the first case due to the chemical conversion of CH4, while for the second case corresponds to the production of the electrolyzer using electrical energy, which accounts for 8–10% of solar primary energy and electric grid supply

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The appearance of certain ground-breaking technologies (promethean or viable technologies) significantly shaped societal metabolism. At the point of utilization, other technologies can further convert the energy delivered into services to feed civilization needs such as food production, mobility, heating, cooling, lighting, among others [12], these transformations merit attention, energy-producing processes (energy harvesting and transforming plants) Considering this trajectory, many of the worldwide efforts have sought to tackle only the first stage, there are different primary sources available today (Figure 1), centering the debate on the renewability [15] of these sources excludes other important aspects, such as the downstream stages until the end-user is reached. O[4n7]t.hOenwthhoelew, thhoelea,dtohpetaeddosptrtaetdegsytrashteoguyldshboeualbdlebteoaqbuleantotifqyutahnetiofvyetrhaellopveerrfoalrlmpaenrcfoeromf athnecesyosftethme usynsdteemr anuanldyesirs,acnoamlypsiisli,ncgotmhepinliencgestshaeryndecaetassaanryd fdeaattauraensdoffethateupreroscoefsst/hteechpnroocloesgsy/taenchdneoxlpogreyssainngd reexlpevreasnstinegnerregleyvflaonwt esnienrgteyrmfloswofscionntseirsmtesnot fdceocnlasriesdteonrt dfuenclcatiroendaol rufnuintsct[i4o8n,4a9l]u. nits [48,49]

Boundaries of Analysis
Case Study
BIOREACTOR CH4 BIOREACTOR
Direct Energy and ESI
EROI and EPT
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call