Life Cycle Assessment of Hydrothermal Carbonization: A Review of Product Valorization Pathways
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Overview of Collected Studies
3.2. Review of HTC Product Inclusion in Collected LCA Studies
3.2.1. Hydrochar Valorization
3.2.2. Process Water Valorization
3.3. Research Gaps and Needs
- Full system level integration to evaluate the influence of location-specific information (e.g., local energy infrastructure, transport distances) on HC valorization impacts;
- HC pre-processing needs for efficient energy generation and land application, and the impact those processes may have on the environment;
- Guidance associated with minimizing environmental impact during HC processing/preparation for energy generation and land application;
- Delineating how critical HC properties (e.g., conversion efficiency to energy) influence product valorization. These are critical in the development of guidelines to achieve environmentally beneficial systems;
- HC behavior in the environment after land application (e.g., impacts on crop growth, carbon sequestration).
- Full system level integration to evaluate the influence of critical factors that control environmentally-beneficial PW valorization approaches;
- Influence of location-specific information (e.g., local infrastructure) on PW valorization;
- Identify the PW properties most critical when deciding between the valorization approaches;
- PW pre-processing (e.g., dilution) requirements for different valorization pathways.
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Feedstock | Study Goal 1 | Functional Unit | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
Agricultural Waste Digestate | A life cycle assessment of this integrated process that recycles the agricultural waste digestate into H2-rich syngas is carried out to evaluate the environmental impact | 0.907 t of dry agricultural waste digestate and 1 MJ of syngas product | [26] |
Almond Shells | Assess the technical and environmental performances of H3PO4-assisted HTC process chain existing at the laboratory scale, to eventually support its optimization and further upscale from an ecodesign perspective | 0.4 g of activated carbon and 0.066 g of levulinic acid per gram of almond shell | [27] |
Dairy Manure | Evaluate the environmental performance of novel nutrients, energy, and water innovations for resource recovery system intended to improve the sustainability of dairy manure management with an integrated HTC component | 1000 kg wet manure produced on a largescale (1000 milking cows) CAFO | [28] |
Dairy Manure | Compare the environmental impacts of resource recovery through NEWIR to existing manure management strategies and AD | 1000 kg raw manure | [29] |
Date Palm Fronds | Provide a comprehensive analysis of the environmental performance of the date palm HTC process | Use (i.e., processing) of 1 kg of palm waste biomass | [30] |
Food Waste | Compare incineration, anaerobic digestion, and FWEB system in Singapore’s context from an environmental perspective | 1 t of food waste | [31] |
Food Waste | Conduct a system-level analysis to benchmark the environmental impacts of a combined HTC, nutrient recovery, and AD process for food waste valorization against the conventional stand-alone AD configuration | treatment of 1 kg of wet food waste | [24] |
Food Waste | Evaluate the environmental impacts associated with the HTC of food wastes and the subsequent combustion of the generated solid product (HC) for energy production | 1 kg of food waste | [32] |
Food Waste | Compare hydrothermal carbonization with AD and composting to assess the energy and environmental advantages of the proposed system | 1 t food waste | [33] |
Food Waste and Organic Fraction of MSW | Analyze the environmental and economic performance of custom treatment paths (anaerobic digestion, HTC and incineration—in series and individually) for organic waste streams in Germany | 1 kWh of energy | [34] |
Green Waste | Provide a case study for the metropolitan region of Berlin, Germany in which leaves and grass cuttings are inputs for the HTC process | 50,000 t/year of prepared and purified fresh matter | [17] |
Green Waste, Food Waste, Organic Fraction of MSW, and Digestate | Present life cycle inventory and life cycle impact assessment results of HTC of green waste (being garden trimmings), food waste (represented by orange peels), organic fraction of municipal solid waste, and digestate at industry-relevant scales | 1 MJ of heat to a building from a domestic 5–15 kW stove | [35] |
Microalgae | Investigate the environmental performance and technical-economic viability of producing the standout products from microalgae—solid biofuel and biofertilizer—at a commercial level | 12.5 m3/h wastewater effluent | [36] |
Microalgae | Perform environmental assessment to determine the environmental impacts of the production and utilization of HC blends and co-firing with hard coal. | 1 kWh of generated electricity | [37] |
Microalgae | Determine the environmental impact of the biological treatment of PW and nutrient recovery via struvite | 1 m3 of treated PW | [38] |
Microalgae & Sludge | Assess the environmental performance of the different co-HTL processes, some of which involve the use of HTC | disposal of 100 kg of mixed materials on a dry basis, consisting of 50% sewage sludge and 50% microalgae | [39] |
Olive Mill Waste | Determine the environmental impacts associated with TPOMW treatment using HTC, and to compare these impacts with those associated with currently used biological and thermal treatment approaches | treatment of 1 kg of fresh TPOMW | [40] |
Olive Pomace | Transform hard-to-dispose-off olive pomace into HC via HTC and analyze the environmental impacts of post-process products | 0.907 t olive pomace | [41] |
Olive Pomace and Grape Marc | Identify which process, combustion, gasification, HTC, and pyrolysis is the most suitable alternative for grape marc and olive pomace | 1 kg of pomace with 60% moisture | [42] |
Organic fraction of MSW | Determine if HC is a more environmentally friendly energy carrier than lignite coal | production of 1 kWh of electricity | [43] |
Organic Fraction of MSW and Sewage Sludge | Compare the environmental performance of three different blends of organic biomass wastes in the search for renewable and environmentally sustainable energies | 1 kg of raw material | [44] |
Organic fraction of MSW & AD Digestate | Evaluate whether the HTC process can reduce the greenhouse gas emissions when treating OFMSW compared to the current base case | production and export of exergy | [45] |
Organic Fraction of Urban MSW | Evaluate the environmental impact of extracting phosphorus from HC and using the HC as solid fuel | 1 kg of wet biowaste with 100% content of biogenic carbon of total carbon | [46] |
Peat Moss & Miscanthus | Evaluate the environmental performance of hydrothermally carbonized biomass (peat moss, miscanthus, and a blend of the two) used for energy or as a soil amendment compared with untreated biomass | 1 t dry feedstock either left on-site or processed and used for either soil amendment or energy application | [19] |
Poultry Litter | Determine the feasibility of using slow pyrolysis, fast pyrolysis, gasification, HTC, hydrothermal liquefaction, and supercritical water gasification specifically for the case of poultry litter and to determine whether they provide clear benefits over the conventional disposal method of direct land application | management of 1000 kg of fresh or wet poultry litter with a 25% w/w moisture content | [47] |
Pulp & Paper Mill Sludge | Assess HTC and gasification as alternative treatments for the organic fraction of urban solid waste | (1) 0.907 t of the organic fraction of MSW and (2) 1 MWh energy | [18] |
Rice Husk | Conduct a technical, economic, and environmental analysis of rice husk to fuel based on three conversion technologies: hydrothermal carbonization with palletization, catalytic pyrolysis, and anaerobic co-digestion | 0.907 t rice husks | [48] |
Sewage Sludge | Evaluate the environmental performance of an integrated system of an existing Water Resources Recovery Facility and a hypothetical hydrothermal carbonization plant applied to the generated sewage sludge | 1 t of sewage sludge | [49] |
Sewage Sludge | Evaluate the feasibility and efficiency of integrating an HTC section into the layout of a conventional WWTP | 1 m3 of wastewater entering the plant | [50] |
Sewage Sludge | Compare the environmental performance of the HTC and AD-integrated scenario with the standalone AD system for sewage sludge valorization | treatment and disposal of 1000 kg wet mixed sludge consisting of 60.4% PSS and 39.6% SSS | [4] |
Sewage Sludge | Provide scientifically substantiated evidence of whether pre-treatment by HTC or pyrolysis can give the decisive edge in reducing environmental impacts in comparison to a direct combustion of sewage sludge | 1 t of raw sewage sludge | [51] |
Sewage Sludge | Evaluate the environmental consequences of different alternatives for using HC pellets produced from mixed sludges from pulp and paper mills in Sweden | 1 t of dry sludge | [10] |
Sugracane Bagasse | Quantify environmental impacts of electricity production from sugarcane bagasse HC generated via microwave-assisted HTC | 1 MJ electricity generation HC produced from MAHTC treatment | [52] |
Wet Mechanically Separated MSW | Clarify the sustainability of the HTC process at a system level from an environmental point of view | 1 t of USF | [53] |
Feedstock | HC Processing Steps Included | Fuel Source Substituted | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
Dairy Manure | Drying, pelletizing, combustion | Low-grade coal in conventional coal-fired power plants | [28] |
Dairy Manure | Filtration, drying, combustion | coal | [29] |
Food Waste | Drying and combustion | hard coal briquettes | [24] |
Food Waste | Solid/liquid separation, drying, pelletization, combustion | lignite | [34] |
Food Waste | Drying, combustion | Compared different coals, biomass, and average US electricity mix | [32] |
Food Waste and Organic Fraction of MSW | Drying | hard coal briquettes | [4] |
Green Waste | Distribution, combustion | Hard coal in electricity and heat | [17] |
Microalgae | HC separation | No substitution appears to have been modeled | [36] |
Microalgae | HC dewatering (centrifugation and heating), combustion in a combined heat and power plant | Hard coal, as a result of blending with HC | [37] |
Olive Pomace | Centrifugation, drying, combustion | Electricity | [41] |
Olive Mill Waste | Gravity drainage, drying, incineration | Coal-based electricity | [40] |
Olive Pomace and Grape Marc | Dryer, gasifier | No substitution appears to have been modeled | [42] |
Organic Fraction of Urban MSW | De-ashing, drying, pelletizing, combustion | fossil coal | [49] |
Organic fraction of MSW | Decanter, belt dryer, pelletizer, incineration in lignite power plant | Lignite coal | [43] |
Organic Fraction of MSW and Sewage Sludge | Filtration, drying, pelletization, combustion | Chilean energy matrix | [44] |
Organic Fraction of MSW and AD Digestate | Solid/liquid separation, drying, pelletizing, incineration or gasification | No substitution appears to have been modeled, HC was co-combusted with lignite coal | [45] |
Peat Moss & Miscanthus | Drying and transportation | No substitution appears to have been modeled | [19] |
Pulp & Paper Mill Sludge | Filtration, drying, pelletization, combustion | No substitution appears to have been modeled | [18] |
Rice Husk | Filtration, drying, pelletizing | Not reported | [48] |
Sewage Sludge | Drying (belt press and heat), pelletization, combustion | Lignite | [49] |
Sewage Sludge | Mechanical dewatering by filter press, drying, incineration | No substitution appears to have been modeled | [50] |
Sewage Sludge | Dewatering, drying, pelletization, combustion | Compared substitution of coal and solid wastes | [10] |
Sewage Sludge | Centrifugation, drying, pelletizing, combustion | fossil fuel | [53] |
Sewage Sludge | Dewatering, transport, incineration | German electricity mix | [51] |
Sugracane Bagasse | Briquette production, transport, emissions from combustion | Compared several: average high voltage electricity generation, electricity from co-generation of sweet sorghum bagasse, incineration of MSW, conventional natural gas power plant, hard coal combustion, and lignite combustion | [52] |
Wet Mechanically Separated MSW | De-ashing, drying, pelletizing, combustion | Fossil coal | [35] |
Feedstock | Processes Included in the Extraction | Extraction Acid | Nutrient Replacement Sources | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Organic Fraction of Urban MSW | Drying, acid and base addition, land application | Compared HNO3, HCl, H2SO4 | Phosphorus from phosphate rock | [46] |
Sewage Sludge | Filter press, dryer, grinder, mixer (HNO3), filter press, land application | HNO3 | Phosphorus fertilizer | [49] |
Sewage Sludge | Drying, HC incineration, phosphorus recovery from ash | Not reported | Not reported | [51] |
Feedstock | Processes Modeled | Ref. |
---|---|---|
Food Waste | Filtration and drying | [33] |
Microalgae | Filtration | [36] |
Peat Moss and Miscanthus | Transport, land application with carbon mineralization | [19] |
Poultry Litter | Land application (including mineralization of carbon) | [47] |
Feedstock | PW Management | Ref. |
---|---|---|
Agricultural Waste Digestate | No treatment | [26] |
Almond Shells | Extraction of levulinic acid using rotary evaporation, following extraction the liquid is used as input to solid-phase activation | [27] |
Dairy Manure | Algae cultivation for nutrient recovery and production of protein-rich cattle feed, and water recovery from algae pond effluent via membrane distillation | [28] |
Dairy Manure | Algae cultivation for nutrient recovery and production of protein-rich cattle feed, and water recovery from algae pond effluent via membrane distillation | [29] |
Date Palm Fronds | No treatment | [30] |
Food Waste | Transesterfication of bio-oil by acid treatment and glycerol recovery | [31] |
Food Waste | Nutrient recovery via struvite, then AD with biogas generation and combustion and subsequent land application of digestate | [24] |
Food Waste | No treatment | [32] |
Food Waste | Treatment at a WWTP | [33] |
Food Waste and Organic Fraction of MSW | Nanofiltration/reverse osmosis and combustion of the retentate | [34] |
Green Waste | Treatment at a WWTP | [17] |
Green Waste, Food Waste, Organic Fraction of MSW, and Digestate | Reverse osmosis; concentrate is diluted and then land applied | [35] |
Microalgae | No treatment | [36] |
Microalgae | No treatment | [37] |
Microalgae | Biological treatment followed by struvite precipitation; precipitates to be used as a fertilizer | [38] |
Microalgae & Sludge | Treat via HTL to produce products of value | [39] |
Olive Mill Waste | No treatment | [40] |
Olive Pomace | AD with biogas generation and combustion | [41] |
Olive Pomace and Grape Marc | No treatment | [42] |
Organic fraction of municipal solid waste | Nanofiltration and reverse osmosis; excess permeate was sent to a WWTP and excess retentate was combusted | [43] |
Organic Fraction of Urban MSW | Reverse osmosis; concentrate is diluted and then land applied | [46] |
Organic Fraction of MSW and AD Digestate | Nanofiltration and reverse osmosis; excess permeate was sent to a WWTP and excess retentate was combusted | [45] |
Organic Fraction of MSW and Sewage Sludge | No treatment | [44] |
Peat Moss & Miscanthus | Direct land application | [19] |
Poultry Litter | AD with biogas generation and combustion and subsequent land application of digestate | [47] |
Pulp & Paper Mill Sludge | No treatment | [18] |
Rice Husk | No treatment | [48] |
Sewage Sludge | AD with biogas generation and combustion and subsequent land application of digestate (following composting) | [49] |
Sewage Sludge | AD with biogas generation and combustion | [50] |
Sewage Sludge | Treatment at a WWTP | [10] |
Sewage Sludge | AD with biogas generation and combustion and subsequent land application of digestate | [4] |
Sewage Sludge | Nanofiltration and reverse osmosis; excess permeate was sent to a WWTP and excess retentate was combusted | [51] |
Sugracane Bagasse | Not included in the analysis | [52] |
Wet Mechanically Separated MSW | Comparison between WWTP, reverse osmosis, AD and a combination of AD and reverse osmosis | [53] |
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Ogunleye, A.; Flora, J.; Berge, N. Life Cycle Assessment of Hydrothermal Carbonization: A Review of Product Valorization Pathways. Agronomy 2024, 14, 243. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy14020243
Ogunleye A, Flora J, Berge N. Life Cycle Assessment of Hydrothermal Carbonization: A Review of Product Valorization Pathways. Agronomy. 2024; 14(2):243. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy14020243
Chicago/Turabian StyleOgunleye, Andrea, Joseph Flora, and Nicole Berge. 2024. "Life Cycle Assessment of Hydrothermal Carbonization: A Review of Product Valorization Pathways" Agronomy 14, no. 2: 243. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy14020243
APA StyleOgunleye, A., Flora, J., & Berge, N. (2024). Life Cycle Assessment of Hydrothermal Carbonization: A Review of Product Valorization Pathways. Agronomy, 14(2), 243. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy14020243