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Electricity Generation from Wood Sawdust: A Sustainable Approach to Biomass Energy Utilization in Nigeria

木材おがくずからの発電:ナイジェリアにおけるバイオマスエネルギー利用の持続可能なアプローチ (AI 翻訳)

Kokumo, Endurance Agbonmwandolor

Zenodoプレプリント2026-06-10#再生可能エネルギー
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20605107
原典: https://zenodo.org/records/20605107
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🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本研究は、ナイジェリアで大量に発生する木材おがくずを原料としたガス化発電の技術的・経済的実現性を評価。小規模ガス化プラントの設計と熱力学的性能分析により、20-30%の電気変換効率が可能であることを示す。エド州の事例分析では、ディーゼル発電機の代替として地域電化に貢献する可能性を提示している。

English

This study evaluates the technical and economic feasibility of electricity generation from wood sawdust via gasification in Nigeria. It designs a small-scale gasification plant and performs thermodynamic analysis, achieving 20-30% electrical conversion efficiency. A case study in Edo State shows potential for replacing diesel generators and improving rural electrification.

Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.

📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters

日本のGX文脈において

日本ではバイオマス発電が普及しているが、本論文はナイジェリアの小規模分散型電化に焦点。日本の廃棄物バイオマス活用や地域エネルギー自給の参考になる可能性がある。

In the global GX context

This paper provides a case study of decentralized biomass gasification in a developing country, relevant to global energy access and climate mitigation. It complements discussions on technology transfer and sustainable waste management in the Global South.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:This paper presents a case study of small-scale biomass gasification for rural electrification in Nigeria, offering insights into technical feasibility and energy efficiency.

🏢実務担当者:Could be useful for companies considering decentralized biomass power projects in developing countries.

🏛政策担当者:Highlights the potential of biomass waste-to-energy for improving energy access and reducing open burning in developing regions.

📄 Abstract(原文)

With the global demand for electricity growing and the concerns over the environment and the continued problems with power supply reliability in many developing countries increasing the need for sustainable and decentralized energy solutions. Traditional electricity generation methods that are dependent upon fossil fuels also play a significant role in greenhouse gas emissions, air pollution and climate change. Therefore, renewable energy technologies are a critical part of the strategies to achieve sustainable development and carbon emission reduction globally. Biomass energy is a promising option among the total renewable energy resources, because biomass is widely available, carbon neutral, and can be used to convert the organic wastes into useful energy (Demirbas, 2001; McKendry, 2002). Wood sawdust is a by-product of timber processing industries in saw mill and furniture manufacturing factories, which is an abundant biomass resource with little utilization. Sawdust is produced in significant amounts in many developing nations, such as Nigeria, and is often burned in the open or dumped in an unmanaged manner. In such cases, disposal of waste products leads to environmental pollution, emissions of particulate matter into the atmosphere and involves waste management issue in the locality (Basu, 2013). Although it has low carbon content, this biomass residue has good energy potential because of its relatively high calorific value and lignocellulosic composition and therefore can be used for thermochemical energy conversion processes (combustion, gasification and pyrolysis) (Bridgwater, 2003). In this work, the feasibility of producing electricity from wood sawdust through thermochemical conversion technologies is explored focusing on biomass gasification. Gasification is an advanced biomass conversion process that is the partial oxidation of biomass at high temperatures and in a controlled oxygen environment to produce a combustible gas mixture (synthesis gas or syngas). The syngas produced usually contains carbon monoxide (CO), hydrogen (H₂), methane (CH₄) and other gases which can be used to generate essslectricity power through internal combustion engines or gas turbines. (Basu, 2013). Gasification can be more energy efficient than direct combustion technologies, help to lower emissions and provide higher flexibility in decentralised energy systems. The research assesses the physical-chemical characteristics of wood sawdust such as moisture content, calorific value, particle size distribution and ash content, which greatly affect the efficiency of biomass conversion processes. Further, the study covers the system design aspects for small-scale biomass gasification plants, such as feedstock preparation plants, biomass gasifier reactors, gas cleaning plant, and power generation plant. Thermodynamic performance analysis is carried out to estimate the energy conversion efficiency and to see the possibility of generating electricity from sawdust as the main feedstock. For a practical illustration, a case study on sawmill operations in the Edo State of Nigeria in Benin City is presented, where huge amounts of wood residues are produced every day. The analysis shows that the use of sawdust as a source of energy through gasification-based power generation can be a reliable and sustainable decentralized energy supply for local communities, small industries and rural enterprises. The initial evaluation of energy potential indicated that these systems could be used to decrease the use of diesel generators and enhance access to energy in off-grid locations. The results show that electrical conversion efficiency of 20-30% can be realized with gasification technology based on sawdust, depending on the quality of the feedstock, the design of the gasifier and operating conditions. Besides, biomass gasification can also help achieve significant environmental advantages such as decreased open burning of biomass, decreased greenhouse gas emissions, and better waste management. From an economic point of view, availability of low cost biomass feedstock also makes the systems more economically viable for a rural electrification project. The study concludes that the utilization of biomass energy through electricity generation from sawdust is technically feasible, environmentally sustainable and economically attractive in the developing economies. Sawdust power systems could play a part in rural development, enhance energy security, and help boost renewable energy use and sustainable resource management on a global scale.

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