Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148

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Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
  • Book Part
    Waste to Energy Management
    (Elsevier, 2025) Yagmur Goren, A.Y.; Kalinci, Y.; Dincer, I.
    Today, the world faces growing challenges with waste problems since people have moved the problems from past to future. The key question is: is waste a problem or a resource? The correct response to this question can be found by investigating, in more detail, the types of waste and implemented waste management methods. The chapter consists of six main sections. The first section is focused on classification, which explains what waste is and categorizes it according to the producer (e.g., municipal, industrial, and hazardous) and chemical composition (for instance, organic, inorganic, and microbiological). The second section presents legislative trends. It is seen that the waste management legislations are changing from country to country. Also, it can change over time because every technological development emerges its waste. The third section covers waste management methods such as recycling, refuse-derived fuel, landfill, and thermal methods. The landfill method is the oldest and the cheapest one. It is seen that the method will continue in the near future, too, though a lot of legal regulations have been made to reduce its usage. Thermal methods are commonly used in the industrial sector. Hence, thermal methods such as incineration, pyrolysis, and gasification are examined in detail. Considering environmental issues, thermal technology moves toward gasification systems to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and the formation of by-products. The fourth section presents illustrative examples related to using waste management methods or their combinations. Further, a case study, which consists of a circulated fluidized bed gasification system, is investigated from the exergy and exergoeconomic points of view. The chapter presents exergy and exergoeconomic analyses in detail. The analyses show that it can produce 1.17 MWe power and 0.521kg/s hydrogen with 3.33 $/kg cost from 8.5kg/s biomass waste. Finally, future scenarios for waste management are investigated. Also, to achieve zero waste targets in the future, circular economy and industrial symbiosis concepts are examined, and some successful examples from around the world are presented. © 2025 Elsevier Inc. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
  • Book Part
    Citation - Scopus: 1
    Biomass-Based Polygeneration Systems With Hydrogen Production: a Concise Review and Case Study
    (Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH, 2024) Hajimohammadi Tabriz,Z.; Mohammadpourfard,M.; Gökçen Akkurt,G.; Çağlar,B.
    This chapter discusses the importance of biomass-based polygeneration systems in producing hydrogen as a clean and safe energy carrier. The benefits of polygeneration systems, which can produce multiple products and minimize waste, are highlighted, and the need for clean and efficient hydrogen production is emphasized. This study gives a brief overview of hydrogen production from biomass-based polygeneration systems, which examines the systems in two main classifications: systems that use biomass as a potential and rich source of hydrogen and systems that exploit the energy content of biomass to run hydrogen production units. Furthermore, a new multigeneration system with hydrogen production has been introduced and thermodynamically evaluated. Also, its results have been obtained in a real situation. Overall, this chapter offers insights into the potential of biomass-based polygeneration systems in meeting energy demands while reducing environmental impact. © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2024.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 8
    Citation - Scopus: 11
    Design, Thermodynamic and Economic Evaluation, and Optimization of Gasoline Production From Refinery Furnaces Flue Gas
    (Elsevier, 2023) Nazerifard, Reza; Mohammadpourfard, Mousa; Heris, Saeed Zeinali
    In this paper, the conversion of refinery furnaces’ flue gas into gasoline through the MTG process is investigated. This approach not only reduces greenhouse gas emissions, but also produces a high-value product, providing economic incentives to adopt this technology. The proposed integrated system comprises an organic Rankine cycle, an amine-based carbon capture unit, a methanol synthesis unit, and an MTG unit. In this study, we evaluated the technical and economic aspects of this conversion process, including the thermodynamic and cost analysis, to assess its viability as a sustainable solution for mitigating CO2 emissions from refineries. Also, using response surface methodology combined with the Box-Behnken design, the proposed integrated system was optimized to minimize the gasoline production cost. The thermodynamic assessment concludes that the energy and exergy efficiencies of the overall system are 73.12% and 85.24%, respectively. The proposed system yields an annual gasoline production rate of >184 million liters. The estimated total capital investment for the proposed system is 172.16 M$, which the methanol synthesis unit with a share of 48.65% is the most expensive one. The results give a gasoline production cost of 1.58 $/kg or 4.28 $/gal for the optimized case. Also, hydrogen has the highest contribution in the production cost, so with a 20% decrease in the price of hydrogen, the production cost of gasoline decreases by 18.71%. With this rate of technological improvement, reductions in the price of hydrogen seem inevitable in not-so-distant years, which makes the proposed system of converting refinery furnaces’ flue gas into gasoline became desirable. © 2023 Elsevier Ltd
  • Book Part
    Citation - Scopus: 4
    Investigation of a New Methanol, Hydrogen, and Electricity Production System Based on Carbon Capture and Utilization
    (Springer, 2023) Khani, Leyla; Mohammadpourfard, Mousa
    It is well-known that clean energy transition requires low carbon emission. The increase in population, economic development, and human welfare demands has led to a rise in energy consumption, mainly supplied by fossil fuels. However, burning fossil fuels produces carbon dioxide, which is a greenhouse gas and a contributor to environmental problems. Therefore, carbon capture and conversion to different products have gained attention. On the other hand, combining two or more different thermodynamic systems for simultaneous production of various demands from one energy source looks reasonable. In this regard, a new trigeneration system is proposed to decrease atmospheric carbon dioxide emission and produce methanol, hydrogen, and power. A flue gas stream with a defined composition, solar energy, and atmospheric air are the system’s inlets. Then, mass, energy, and exergy balance equations are applied for each subsystem to investigate the system’s thermodynamic performance. Also, the effect of changing operating parameters on the performance of each subsystem is studied. © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 7
    Citation - Scopus: 7
    Comprehensive Thermoeconomic Study of a New Solar Thermosyphon-Assisted Multigeneration System
    (Elsevier, 2023) Anamaq, Rasoul Najafi; Khani, Leyla; Mohammadpourfard, Mousa; Heris, Saeed Zeinali; Gökçen Akkurt, Gülden
    Nowadays, due to the global energy crisis, limited reservoirs of fossil fuels, and their negative environmental effects, the use of renewable energy sources and multigeneration systems have become good alternatives for conventional thermodynamic systems. One of these resources, whose technology has developed rapidly in recent years, is the use of solar energy for the simultaneous generation of various products. Therefore, in this research, a multigeneration system with several subsystems is introduced. The proposed system includes a solar energy collector to receive thermal energy, two thermal energy storage tanks, an organic Rankine cycle, and a Kalina cycle to generate electricity, a multi-effect distillation unit to produce fresh water, an electrolyzer to produce hydrogen, as well as heat recovery for hot water and hot air generation. In this multigeneration system, the cooling unit is designed with the help of a thermosyphon. The performance of the proposed system is studied from energy, exergy, environmental, and exergoeconomic viewpoints using Aspen HYSYS and EES software. The obtained results show that due to the addition of the thermosyphon unit to the refrigeration system, the exergy efficiency increases from 55.62% to 70.26%. As a result of this combination, the performance of the whole system is improved and the amount of costs are reduced. In addition, the parabolic collector system has the highest exergy destruction ratio, 39%, among the subsystems. Furthermore, the results of the exergoeconomic analysis indicate that the PEM water heater with 33.3% and the ejector with 22.7% own the highest cost destruction rates.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 49
    Citation - Scopus: 51
    Energy, Exergy, Exergoeconomic, and Exergoenvironmental (4e) Analysis of a New Bio-Waste Driven Multigeneration System for Power, Heating, Hydrogen, and Freshwater Production: Modeling and a Case Study in Izmir
    (Elsevier, 2023) Tabriz, Zahra Hajimohammadi; Mohammadpourfard, Mousa; Gökçen Akkurt, Gülden; Heris, Saeed Zeinali
    Today, the world is facing numerous challenges such as the increasing demand for energy, fossil fuels reduction, the growth of atmospheric pollutants, and the water crisis. In the present research, a new multigeneration system based on urban sewage bio-waste has been designed and evaluated for power, hydrogen, freshwater, and heating production. This system, which consists of biomass conversion subsystem, hydrogen production unit, Brayton cycle, atmospheric water harvesting unit, steam Rankine cycle, and organic Rankine cycles, has been evaluated from a thermodynamic point of view, and the energy, exergy, exergoeconomic, and exergoenvironmental analyses have been carried out on it. In the current study, the atmospheric water harvesting unit, as an attractive and environmentally friendly technology, is integrated with this Biomass-based multigeneration. A case study has been conducted on this system using the information collected from cigli wastewater treatment plant located In Izmir province, Turkey, and the results indicate that such a system, in addition to receiving sewage sludge from the treatment plant unit as a polluting waste, can produce added value products. The modeling results show that in the base conditions and with a feed rate of 7.52 kg/s, the total power generated by this system is 17750 kW, the hydrogen production rate is 3180 kg/h, the freshwater production rate is more than 18 l/h, and the energy and exergy efficiencies are 35.48% and 40.18%, respectively. According to the exergoeconomic and exergoenvironmental evaluations, the unit cost of total products and the unit emission of carbon dioxide are calculated as 13.05 $/GJ and 0.2327 t/MWh, respectively. Also, the results of parametric studies show that increasing the rate of Biomass improves the overall energy efficiency and production rates and also reduces the unit emission of carbon dioxide, but on the other hand, it causes a decrease in exergy efficiency and an increase in the unit cost of total products.