Your choices:
1 Process heat (> 1000 °C); 2 Biomass (solid); 3 Fuel: solid
What is your resource? | What do you want to deliver? | What is the service the customer wants? |
Biomass (digestible sludge) | District cooling | Comfortable indoor climate |
Biomass (fermentable sludge) | District heating | Electricity |
2 Biomass (solid) | Electricity | Process cooling (< 0 °C) |
Geothermal | Fuel: Gaseous | Process heat/steam (50 - 150 °C) |
Sunshine | Fuel: Liquid | Process heat (150 - 1000 °C) |
Water | 3 Fuel: Solid | 1 Process heat (> 1000 °C) |
Wind | Local cooling (ind. house) | Transport |
Residual oils/fats etc | Local heating (ind. house) |
Some processes, such as the small scale production of art glass in pot furnaces or the burning and glazing of ceramics in small-scale or handicraft applications, will only have a single burner mounted in the main furnace and the main temperature control will be done changing the load only on that burner.
Though the single installation in this case will be small, the number of such installations throughout Europe is large.
For applications like these, wood pellet burners would be the preferred choice. Commercial wood pellet burners are available in sizes from 15 up to 500 kW, hoppers and feeding systems are available in a number of sizes and pellets are available basically anywhere in Europe.
If briquettes or chips would be selected for these applications there would be a need for major reconstructions of the furnaces and this would probably not be a realistic alternative.
In larger scale, cement or calcining kilns also have only one burner and would be well suited for direct firing of pulverised biomass powder. In Sweden, there are already several examples of bark-powder firing in calcining furnaces at pulp mills.