novel approach, combining electrolysis and oxygen-blown entrained flow gasification enables high carbon
efficiency for producing sustainable Fischer–Tropsch fuels. This Power-and-Biomass-to-Liquid process combines
the concepts of using biomass as the carbon and energy source (Biomass-to-Liquid) and hydrogen as an energy
carrier supplied from carbon-neutral renewable energies (Power-to-Liquid). A highly integrated Biomass-to-
Liquid process is modeled in detail using Aspen Plus®. To enhance process performance, integrating green
hydrogen and oxygen from water electrolysis is modeled and the use of polymer electrolyte membrane and
solid oxide electrolysis at elevated temperature is compared. The energy efficiency of a conventional Biomassto-
Liquid process with advanced heat and material integration is about 46%, while overall carbon efficiency
is about 41%. By adding hydrogen from electrolysis, the product yield is increased by a factor of 1.7–2.4. The
improvement in fuel production comes at the price of a hydrogen demand in the range of 0.19–0.24 tH2 /tfuel.
For 200 MWth biomass input, this results in electrolyzer sizes between 120–320 MWel, depending on the
process configuration and the electrolysis technology used. The detailed process models show the high potential
for increasing carbon efficiency to up to 67%–97% by integrating renewable power into a Biomass-to-Liquid
process.
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novel approach, combining electrolysis and oxygen-blown entrained flow gasification enables high carbon
efficiency for producing sustainable Fischer–Tropsch fuels. This Power-and-Biomass-to-Liquid process combines
the concepts of using biomass as the carbon and energy source (Biomass-to-Liquid) and hydrogen as an energy
carrier supplied from carbon-neutral renewable energies (Power-to-Liquid). A highly integrated Biomass-to-
Liquid process is modeled in detail using Aspen Plus®. To enhance p...
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