4.8 Article

Power-Law Relationships for Estimating Mass, Fuel Consumption and Costs of Energy Conversion Equipments

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 45, Issue 2, Pages 751-754

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es103095k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Environmental Protection Agency through the UC Center for Environmental Implications of Nanotechnology [EF0830117]
  3. UC Discovery Industry-University Cooperative Research Program [GCP07-10239A]
  4. NanoH2O Inc.

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To perform life-cycle assessment studies, data on the production and use of the products is required. However, often only few data or measurements are available. Estimation of properties can be performed by applying scaling relationships. In many disciplines, they are used to either predict data or to search for underlying patterns, but they have not been considered in the context of product assessments hitherto. The goal of this study was to explore size scaling for commonly used energy conversion equipment, that is, boilers, engines, and generators. The variables mass M, fuel consumption Q, and costs C were related to power P. The established power-law relationships were M = 10(0.73.. 1.89) P-0.64.. 1.23 (R-2 >= 0.94), Q = 10(0.06.. 0.68) P-0.82.. 1.02 (R-2 >= 0.98) and C = 10(2.46.. 2.86) P-0.83.. 0.85 (R-2 >= 0.83). Mass versus power and costs versus power showed that none of the equipment types scaled isometrically, that is, with a slope of 1. Fuel consumption versus power scaled approximately isometrically for steam boilers, the other equipments scaled significantly lower than 1. This nonlinear scaling behavior induces a significant size effect. The power laws we established can be applied to scale the mass, fuel consumption and costs of energy conversion equipments up or down. Our findings suggest that empirical scaling laws can be used to estimate properties, particularly relevant in studies focusing on early product development for which generally only little information is available.

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