Investigation of Palm Oil Wastes Characteristics for Co-firing with Coal
Nowadays, renewable energy is a reliable solution for addressing global warming and fossil fuel depletion issues. Malaysia has an abundance of biomass resources currently underutilized to generate electricity, such as palm oil waste. Wastes from a palm oil mill plant, such as empty fruit bunch (EFB)...
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my.uniten.dspace-261602023-05-29T17:07:19Z Investigation of Palm Oil Wastes Characteristics for Co-firing with Coal Yacob N.S. Mohamed H. Shamsuddin A.H. 57357724400 57136356100 35779071900 Nowadays, renewable energy is a reliable solution for addressing global warming and fossil fuel depletion issues. Malaysia has an abundance of biomass resources currently underutilized to generate electricity, such as palm oil waste. Wastes from a palm oil mill plant, such as empty fruit bunch (EFB), palm mesocarp fibre (PMF), and palm kernel shell (PKS), are worth to be investigated as a possible raw material for co-firing with coal. The co-firing technique is the low-cost risk approach for the utilization of biomass in electricity generation. This paper aims to review and perform a comparative study on the existing co-firing biomass processes worldwide in order to explore the potential of using palm oil wastes with coal. To achieve successful co-firing of biomass with coal, the feedstock characteristics need to be understood before undergoing several pre-treatment options. It is recommended to implement co-firing palm oil waste with coal in Malaysia because palm oil wastes can reduce greenhouse gas, NOX, and SOX. Co-firing of palm oil wastes in existing coal-fired power plants is one of the practical ways to be implemented as it helps to reduce the over-consumption of fossil fuels. Based on the findings, Malaysia seems to be on the right track to maximize the use of palm oil wastes either in a standalone biomass power plant or in a co-firing power plant. The improved utilization will further minimize the negative impact of the greenhouse gas emission from the untreated palm oil mill wastes. � 2021, Penerbit Akademia Baru. All rights reserved. Final 2023-05-29T09:07:19Z 2023-05-29T09:07:19Z 2021 Article 10.37934/araset.23.1.3442 2-s2.0-85119176831 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85119176831&doi=10.37934%2faraset.23.1.3442&partnerID=40&md5=40ae2c96aba2191cec233a59877840e2 https://irepository.uniten.edu.my/handle/123456789/26160 23 1 34 42 All Open Access, Hybrid Gold Penerbit Akademia Baru Scopus |
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Nowadays, renewable energy is a reliable solution for addressing global warming and fossil fuel depletion issues. Malaysia has an abundance of biomass resources currently underutilized to generate electricity, such as palm oil waste. Wastes from a palm oil mill plant, such as empty fruit bunch (EFB), palm mesocarp fibre (PMF), and palm kernel shell (PKS), are worth to be investigated as a possible raw material for co-firing with coal. The co-firing technique is the low-cost risk approach for the utilization of biomass in electricity generation. This paper aims to review and perform a comparative study on the existing co-firing biomass processes worldwide in order to explore the potential of using palm oil wastes with coal. To achieve successful co-firing of biomass with coal, the feedstock characteristics need to be understood before undergoing several pre-treatment options. It is recommended to implement co-firing palm oil waste with coal in Malaysia because palm oil wastes can reduce greenhouse gas, NOX, and SOX. Co-firing of palm oil wastes in existing coal-fired power plants is one of the practical ways to be implemented as it helps to reduce the over-consumption of fossil fuels. Based on the findings, Malaysia seems to be on the right track to maximize the use of palm oil wastes either in a standalone biomass power plant or in a co-firing power plant. The improved utilization will further minimize the negative impact of the greenhouse gas emission from the untreated palm oil mill wastes. � 2021, Penerbit Akademia Baru. All rights reserved. |
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57357724400 |
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57357724400 Yacob N.S. Mohamed H. Shamsuddin A.H. |
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Yacob N.S. Mohamed H. Shamsuddin A.H. |
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Yacob N.S. Mohamed H. Shamsuddin A.H. Investigation of Palm Oil Wastes Characteristics for Co-firing with Coal |
author_sort |
Yacob N.S. |
title |
Investigation of Palm Oil Wastes Characteristics for Co-firing with Coal |
title_short |
Investigation of Palm Oil Wastes Characteristics for Co-firing with Coal |
title_full |
Investigation of Palm Oil Wastes Characteristics for Co-firing with Coal |
title_fullStr |
Investigation of Palm Oil Wastes Characteristics for Co-firing with Coal |
title_full_unstemmed |
Investigation of Palm Oil Wastes Characteristics for Co-firing with Coal |
title_sort |
investigation of palm oil wastes characteristics for co-firing with coal |
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Penerbit Akademia Baru |
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2023 |
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1806423299245211648 |
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