Spelling suggestions: "subject:"biomass energy"" "subject:"iomass energy""
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Isolation of cellulolytic enzymes using a metagenomic approach.Kemp, Johan. January 2010 (has links)
M. Tech. Biotechnology. / Fossil fuel is a finite energy source which produces harmful by-products when used for combustion. A possible alternative is bio-fuel, preferably made from non-food cellulosic plants, such as bagasse or wood. Currently, there are some commercial enzymes which degrade cellulose, but there is room for improvement in both rate and sugar yield. The sugars derived from cellulose degradation are fermented to produce fuel-ethanol. This study utilized metagenomics to create a library containing environmental microbial DNA isolated from the rumen of cows. The aim of this study was to isolate local cellulolytic enzymes, more suited to the native environment and plant material, for potential use in the bio-fuel industry.
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The development and evaluation of a biomass activity guide for the Wisconsin K-12 Energy Education Program /Ziolkowski, Carrie Bea. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Stevens Point. / Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree Master of Science in Natural Resources (Environmental Education), College of Natural Resources. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 73-76).
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Investigation of alternative fuel marketsKhachatryan, Hayk, January 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Washington State University, May 2010. / Title from PDF title page (viewed on June 30, 2010). "Graduate School." Includes bibliographical references.
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Fuel from straw : an in-field briquetting processWillmot, Peter January 1990 (has links)
Disposal of large quantities of surplus straw, which lie in the fields after harvest, is a major annual problem to cereal farmers. The current preferred solution of burning the straw where it lies is environmentally unsatisfactory and appears to be a huge waste of a potentially valuable, renewable energy source. None of the currently available straw packaging systems provides an economically viable alternative. A process is proposed for producing industrial quality fuel briquettes using a tractor towed implement. The economic feasibility of such a system is investigated and comparisons are made with existing straw disposal methods. The projected cost of fuel, produced in this way, is compared with prevailing fossil fuel prices. A multistage continuous process machine concept is described and the various stages are proven workable both experimentally, in the laboratory, and analytically. Laboratory experiments determine the forces required to produce acceptable quality briquettes and comparisons are made between the power available from the tractor, the economical throughput rate and the energy consumed in the compaction process. The mechanism of bonding within the straw packages, under compression, is examined so that the parameters necessary to give the optimum machine design may be understood. The effect, on briquette quality, of variations in die shape within the constraints imposed by the machine concept is fully investigated. Experiments extend to compression at speeds representative of 'live' field operation and a die shape is developed which produces packages of consistently good durability. Many of the design ideas put forward in this thesis have now been incorporated in an original prototype machine, built and successfully field-tested by the company who has supported this project and now holds the relevant patents.
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Innovation, user participation, and forest energy developmentGamser, M. S. January 1986 (has links)
The thesis examines the process of technical change in industrialized and developing country situations, and extracts lessons from this analysis for the design and implementation of forest energy development programmes. It notes how the role of technology users is of great importance in innovation" whether this process involves "high technology" development in large, competitive firms, or "appropriate technology" development to meet basic needs in poor, rural communiti~s. In reviewing the results of the past ten years of work in renewable energy programmes in developing nations, it finds that a major factor in the poor performance of such work is the lack of provision for user participation in innovation. Forest energy development programmes, which have been an important part of renewable energy development assistance, also have suffered from this insufficient attention to technology users. It is postulated that new approaches to forest energy development that provide for a more interactive relationship between R&D establishments and technology Llsers will have greater. success in bringing about innovations in this sector. The experience of charcoal production, charcoal stove, and forestry development under the Sudan Renewable Energy Project, supported by the Sudan Energy Research Council and the US Agency for International Development, demonstrates the positive results of just this sort of interactive innovation strategy. The SREP, in its ~ priori commitment to user participation, uncovers valuable resources of indigenous technical knowledge and skills, which play an integral part in the design and dissemination of these 3 forest energy technologies. The project's success provides an empirical justification of the importance of technology users to the innovation process, and its example h~s larger implications for renewable energy development, government R&D management, and development assistance policy.
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Computer simulation of biomass energy systemsGoldthorp, Mark January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Assessment of methane production from refuse-infillsGardner, Nick January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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Properties of bagasse and other biomass fuels for thermochemical conversion including co-firingSoonarane, Pradeep Mahesh Kumar January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Biomass retention in anaerobic filtersHashemian, S. J. January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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The effect of microclimate upon the growth, photosynthesis and productivity of 'Miscanthus x' giganteus at contrasting planting densitiesCarver, Paul Adrian January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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