When I first got into SE, biomass was all the rage. I later stumbled across some basic combustion science that eluded the difference between theoretical and real heating values. The average guy burning something is blind to the low heat value (LHV) vs the high heat value (HHV). The basic difference is that HHV is the 'chemical' value of combustion vs LHV is the chemical value minus the loss to latent heat of water formation. So, something like coal (think 100% carbon) has HHV=LHV since there's no water byproduct, but some like gasoline has LHV=.92 HHV and losses 8% to water byproduct, while hydrogen losses 18%. Yep, those guys pitching hydrogen as the fuel of tomorrow are stoned or conmen, kinda like those guys pitching ethanol in gasoline. Ethanol fuel additives probably takes more energy to produce than they supply (aka negative energy balance) but their real purpose is to drive up the price of grain, not shrink oil consumption.VincentG wrote: ↑Sun Mar 12, 2023 4:00 pm
I have to add here that the point of this post is for home power generation with a biomass or solar fuel source. We are not concerned about absolute efficiency, just power production with a real world engine build. And big industries have proven it can be done.
Most 'dry' biomass is assumed LHV=.6 HHV but rarely seen in this simple technical reduction.