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Mutually trading off biochar and biogas sectors for broadening biomethane applications: A comprehensive review

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 318, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2021.128593

Keywords

Anaerobic digestion; Biochar; Biogas; Biomethane dissemination; Efficient biomass utilization; Waste valorization

Funding

  1. Indian Institute of Technology Delhi
  2. Indo-Hungarian Joint Project by the Department of Science and Technology (DST) India through Hydrogenotrophic Anaerobic Biotechnological System for Enrichment of Biogas (HABSEB) Technology for Power and Vehicular Fuel Applications [DST/INT > HUN/P-21/2020 (G)]

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The biogas sector has been a prominent figure in renewable energy sources, with Biochar playing a crucial role in its development by offering opportunities for advancements in biogas production, upgradation, and bottling for energy applications. Various properties of biochar have been identified to address challenges in the sector and enhance the different subsidiaries. Incorporating biochar could open up new opportunities for biomethane applications within the biogas sector, leading to a self-resource sufficient biochar-biogas closed-loop system for efficient utilization of waste biomasses.
The biogas sector has been in the limelight among renewable energy sources with its eco-friendly and carbon capturing characteristics for more than a century. Over the years, the sector has expanded into three major subsidiaries, namely, biogas production, upgradation, and bottling and dissemination for energy appli-cations. This review emphasizes exploring the opportunities of the carbonaceous material Biochar on how it can play a crucial role in all the three subsidiaries imparting a positive advancement in the biogas sector. The contribution of different biochar properties in the biogas sector to negotiate the challenges faced explicitly for the biogas production, syntrophic microbial activity, interspecies electron transfer, biomethane enrichment, and high-pressure bottling are extensively discussed from systematically selected literature. According to the study, the properties such as adsorption capacity, high pH, cation exchange capacity, electrical conductivity etc., enhanced the various subsidiaries of the biogas sector. Results suggest that incorporating biochar in the biogas sector could unravel new opportunities in terms of biomethane applications. High-quality biochar is expected from the slow pyrolysis process from the lignin-rich substrate, while easily biodegradable substrate could be utilized for biogas production for mutual trade-offs between the sectors. Thus, a self-resource sufficient biochar-biogas closed-loop system can be developed to utilize waste biomasses efficiently. The techno-economics and sustainability of the proposed concept are also discussed. The study further gives a conclusive outlook on research gaps and future directions over the use of biochar for methane enhancement and enrichment from the biogas and its low-pressure storage.

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