Skip to content
1900

Thermal Energy Integration and Optimization in a Biomass-fueled Multi-generation System for Power, Hydrogen, and Freshwater Production

Abstract

This work investigates a biomass-driven multi-generation system designed for simultaneous power, freshwater, and hydrogen production, addressing the interlinked energy-waterenvironment nexus. The configuration integrates Brayton, supercritical carbon dioxide (SCO2), organic Rankine cycle (ORC), and thermoelectric generator (TEG) subsystems to maximize utilization of biomass-derived syngas. The recovered energy drives a reverse osmosis (RO) desalination unit for freshwater production and an alkaline electrolyzer for hydrogen generation, followed by two-stage compression for storage. Under baseline conditions, the system generates 1.99 MW of electricity, 9.38 kg/h of hydrogen, and 88.6 m3 /h of freshwater, with an overall exergetic efficiency of 20.25 %, emissions intensity of 0.85 kg/kWh, and a payback period of 5.87 years. The Brayton cycle accounts for 49.3 % of the total cost rate, while the gasifier exhibits the highest exergy destruction at 46 %. Sensitivity analyses show that varying biomass moisture content (10–30 %) and operating temperatures (700–900 ◦C) significantly influence system performance. Using a data-driven optimization framework that combines artificial neural networks (ANN) and a genetic algorithm (GA), the system’s exergetic efficiency improves to 21.76 %, freshwater output rises to 90.96 m3 /h, and emissions intensity decreases to 0.877 kg/kWh. Additionally, optimization reduces the total cost rate by 2.71 %, leading to a payback period of 5.4 years, and enhances the system’s overall performance by 12.64 %.

Funding source: The authors extend their appreciation to the Deanship of Research and Graduate Studies at King Khalid University, Saudi Arabia for funding this work through large Research Project under grant number RGP2/159/46. The author extends the appreciation to the Deanship of Postgraduate Studies and Scientific Research at Majmaah University for funding this research work through the project number (ER-2025-2127). FRGS: FP082-2023.
Related subjects: Applications & Pathways
Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journal8312
2025-11-10
2026-03-15

Metrics

/content/journal8312
Loading
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error
Please enter a valid_number test