Abstract

Low harvesting costs and increasing demand for forest-derived biomass led to an increased use of full-tree (FT) harvesting in steep terrain areas in Austria. Logging residues, as a by-product of FT harvesting, present an easily accessible bioenergy resource, but high portions of fine particles and contaminants like earth particles and stones make them a complex and difficult fuel, as they affect storage capability, conversion efficiency, or emission rates adversely. The present research focuses on the productivity and performance of a star screen, which was used to remove fine and oversize particles from previously chipped, fresh Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) logging residue woodchips. Three screen settings, which differed in terms of different rotation speeds of the fine star elements (1861 rpm, 2239 rpm, 2624 rpm) were analyzed. Time studies of the star screen were carried out to estimate screening productivity and costs. Furthermore, 115 samples were collected from all material streams, which were assessed for particle size distribution, calorific value, ash content, and component and elemental composition. Average productivity was 20.6 tonnes (t) per productive system hour (PSH15), corresponding to screening costs of 9.02 €/t. The results indicated that the screening of chipped logging residues with a star screen influenced material characteristics of the medium fraction, as it decreased the ash content, the incidence of fine particles, and the nutrient content. The different screen settings had a noticeable influence on the quality characteristics of the screening products. An increase of the rotation speed of the fine stars reduced screening costs per unit of screened material in the medium fraction, but also lowered screening quality.

Highlights

  • About 47% of the Austrian land area is covered by forests [1], whereof 22% of the forest area is characterized by terrain slopes greater than 60% [2]

  • The results clearly show that a reduction in rotation speed of the fine stars leads to a significantly higher amount of screening rejects and lowers the amount of material in the medium fraction

  • Our results indicated that the screening of green woodchips with a star screen with the fine screen deck set to 1861 rpm or 2239 rpm can significantly reduce the needle content of the screened medium fraction, which positively influenced material characteristics like ash content and particle size distribution

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Summary

Introduction

About 47% of the Austrian land area is covered by forests [1], whereof 22% of the forest area is characterized by terrain slopes greater than 60% [2]. On such steep slopes, ground-based harvesting systems, even equipped with traction winches, often reach their physical and ecological limits [3]. Cable-based harvesting systems, using tower yarders for extracting timber from the forest stand to the forest road, are still widely used in steep terrain harvesting. Until the 1990s, motor-manual CTL systems, where the trees are felled, delimbed, and bucked manually to assortments of varying lengths within the stand, were widely used in steep terrain harvesting.

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