Self-regulated asynchronous cogeneration to enable micro-scale waste-to-energy biogas utilisation

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Title
Self-regulated asynchronous cogeneration to enable micro-scale waste-to-energy biogas utilisation

CoPED ID
3b585359-a942-4379-97f4-ae6a6c89ed26

Status
Closed


Value
£200,000

Start Date
Nov. 1, 2015

End Date
Oct. 31, 2016

Description

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Methane-rich biogas produced as a waste-to-energy (WTE) by-product of organic effluent
treatment in anaerobic digesters and microbial fuel cells has potential to generate 30TWh of
electricity. Yet, whilst combined heat/power units (CHP) based on dedicated industrial biogas
engines currently recover energy from large-scale WTE and cogeneration (CG) technologies
(250KWhe), the current size is not compatible with the waste/energy requirements of most
potential users, meaning that only 1.6% of the available feedstock is being utilised.
Micro-scale WTE technologies – which are uniquely aligned with these requirements – are
therefore predicted to dominate the market through widespread public and industrial
application. However, despite uptake of micro-AD/MFC growing rapidly, there is no
commercial technology for biogas micro-CG due to a fundamental restriction on scalability of
synchronous generator costs with reducing CHP size.
Lindhurst Innovation Engineering aim to realise an enabling technology for a turn-key biogas
micro-CHP, by instead proving the technical feasibility of self-regulated asynchronous
generation, allowing key expensive components for synchronisation to be omitted. Based on a
novel framework for high power factor grid-linked induction, a dedicated micro-scale biogas
engine and integrated scrubbing, the project targets a step change in engine
displacement/electrical generation capacity, system complexity, cost, noise and maintenance.

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Subjects by relevance
  1. Biogas
  2. Waste-to-energy
  3. Technology
  4. Energy production (process industry)
  5. Motors and engines
  6. Bioenergy
  7. Innovations
  8. Costs

Extracted key phrases
  1. Biogas micro
  2. Energy biogas utilisation
  3. Scale biogas
  4. Scale wte technology
  5. Dedicated industrial biogas
  6. Scale waste
  7. Key biogas
  8. Self
  9. Dedicated micro
  10. Rich biogas
  11. Asynchronous cogeneration
  12. Energy requirement
  13. Commercial technology
  14. CHP size
  15. Key expensive component

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations