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Characterizing the Opportunity Space for Sustainable Hydrothermal Valorization of Wet Organic Wastes
Abstract
Resource recovery from wet organic wastes can support circular economies by creating financial incentives to produce renewable energy and return nutrients to agriculture. In this study, we characterize the potential for hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL)-based resource recovery systems to advance the economic and environmental sustainability of wastewater sludge, FOG (fats, oils, and grease), food waste, green waste, and animal manure management through the production of liquid biofuels (naphtha, diesel), fertilizers (struvite, ammonium sulfate), and power (heat, electricity). From the waste management perspective, median costs range from −193 ·tonne–1 (green waste), and median carbon intensities range from 367 kg CO2 eq·tonne–1 (wastewater sludge) to 769 kg CO2 eq·tonne–1 (green waste). From the fuel production perspective, the minimum selling price of renewable diesel blendstocks are within the commercial diesel price range (2.37 to 5.81 $·gal–1) and have a lower carbon intensity than petroleum diesel (101 kg CO2 eq·MMBTU–1). Finally, through uncertainty analysis and Monte Carlo filtering, we set specific targets (i.e., achieve wastewater sludge-to-biocrude yield >0.440) for the future development of hydrothermal waste management system components. Overall, our work demonstrates the potential of HTL-based resource recovery systems to reduce the costs and carbon intensity of resource-rich organic wastes- Text
- Journal contribution
- Biotechnology
- Ecology
- Science Policy
- Space Science
- Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Chemical Sciences not elsewhere classified
- wet organic wastes
- support circular economies
- set specific targets
- rich organic wastes
- produce renewable energy
- monte carlo filtering
- minimum selling price
- eq · tonne
- eq · mmbtu
- creating financial incentives
- animal manure management
- ammonium sulfate ),
- 81 $· gal
- 769 kg co
- 367 kg co
- 251 $· tonne
- 101 kg co
- waste management perspective
- renewable diesel blendstocks
- diesel ), fertilizers
- sustainable hydrothermal valorization
- green waste ),
- median costs range
- lower carbon intensity
- fuel production perspective
- green waste ).
- 2 </ sub
- green waste
- carbon intensity
- petroleum diesel
- hydrothermal liquefaction
- electricity ).
- work demonstrates
- wastewater sludge
- uncertainty analysis
- return nutrients
- opportunity space
- liquid biofuels
- future development
- environmental sustainability
- biocrude yield