Search Prime Grants

DESC0025131

Project Grant

Overview

Grant Description
Particle-level densification of bulk biomass materials to replace pelletized fuels and feedstocks
Awardee
Place of Performance
Auburn, Washington 98001-2457 United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Forest Concepts was awarded Project Grant DESC0025131 worth $200,000 from the Office of Science in July 2024 with work to be completed primarily in Auburn Washington United States. The grant has a duration of 8 months and was awarded through assistance program 81.049 Office of Science Financial Assistance Program. The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity FY 2024 Phase I Release 2.

SBIR Details

Research Type
SBIR Phase I
Title
Particle-Level Densification of Bulk Biomass Materials to Replace Pelletized Fuels and Feedstocks
Abstract
C58-13b-281550-Abstract Pellets are an important commodity as an export and feedstock for renewable energy production, both locally for heat and globally for power. Additionally, there is a new emerging set of users for pelleted feedstocks in the advanced biofuels and biochemicals arena that are explicitly specifying pellets to take advantage of high particle density, high thermal conductivity/low porosity, and higher surface area per unit bulk volume. However, the process of creating these high-density pellets is energy intensive and expensive. Converters desire the particle-level properties of deconstructed pellets, but at a lower cost and with less equipment at the front end of their biorefineries. Thus, there is tremendous opportunity to change particle morphology (shape) and particle porosity through compression to increase bulk density using new particle-specific processing methods. To date, it is unclear what the optimal process parameters are that maintain flowability characteristics of the bulk biomass as well as comparable bulk densities to pellets without the energy consumption of drying, undersized grinding, and recompression into larger particles. This project creates a rigorous pathway to answer key science and engineering questions to develop an optimal particle-level densification process. This will be accomplished in part through the development of a lab-scale apparatus in phase 1 to measure forces and energy consumption for continuous crushing of particulate biomass under various conditions. Phase II will use the Phase 1 data set to develop and optimal pilot scale (approximately 1 ton per hour) machine for light-commercial validation and demonstration of the technology. Phase III will focus on the deployment at full commercial scale (approximately 10 tons per hour) of the technology. The proposed technology may open additional markets for domestic wood fuel producers, enabling community-scale biomass processing centers to provide lower-cost wood fuels to local disadvantaged consumers. If 10% of the US pellet market adopts the new technologies, then a total of 185 million kwh (combined electrical and natural gas sources) will be saved annually. The new technologies remove the drying component of pellet production, potentially reducing carbon emissions by 29,000 metric tons (Mg) per year, contributing to cleaner energy production.
Topic Code
C58-13b
Solicitation Number
DE-FOA-0003202

Status
(Complete)

Last Modified 8/27/24

Period of Performance
7/22/24
Start Date
3/21/25
End Date
100% Complete

Funding Split
$200.0K
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$200.0K
Total Obligated
100.0% Federal Funding
0.0% Non-Federal Funding

Activity Timeline

Interactive chart of timeline of amendments to DESC0025131

Additional Detail

Award ID FAIN
DESC0025131
SAI Number
None
Award ID URI
SAI EXEMPT
Awardee Classifications
Small Business
Awarding Office
892430 SC CHICAGO SERVICE CENTER
Funding Office
892401 SCIENCE
Awardee UEI
JA9TMPHDB3N5
Awardee CAGE
1R7J8
Performance District
WA-09
Senators
Maria Cantwell
Patty Murray
Modified: 8/27/24