1. Co-processing of end-of-life wind turbine blades in portland cement production.
- Author
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Schindler, Anton K., Duke, Steve R., and Galloway, W. Braxton
- Subjects
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WIND turbine blades , *CEMENT industries , *PORTLAND cement , *CARBON emissions , *RAW materials , *CALCINATION (Heat treatment) , *SILICA fume - Abstract
[Display omitted] • Glass fiber wind turbine blades (WTBs) can provide raw material to produce cement. • Glass fiber WTBs can serve as fuel and replace coal to produce cement. • High boron in some glass fiber WTBs might limit replacement rates. • Combustion of fossil-fuel polymer in WTBs can slightly reduce plant CO 2 emissions. • Glass fiber wind turbine blades are compatible with the cement production process. The objective of this paper is to evaluate the feasibility of co-processing wind turbine blade (WTB) material in cement manufacturing to provide an end-of-life means to divert the solid waste of decommissioned WTBs from landfills. Many WTBs consist primarily of glass fiber reinforced thermoset polymers that are difficult to recover or recycle. Portland cement is produced world-wide in large quantities, requiring immense quantities of raw materials (mostly calcium oxide and silicon oxide) and kiln temperatures approaching 1,450 °C. This work contributes analyses of WTB material composition, and predicts the energy provided through the combustible components of the WTBs and raw material contributions provided by incorporating the incombustible components of the WTBs to produce cement. Approximately 40 to 50 % of the WTB material will contribute as fuel to cement production, and approximately 50 to 60 % of the WTB material is expected to be incombustible. One tonne of WTB material can displace approximately 0.4 to 0.5 tonne of coal, while also contributing approximately 0.1 tonne of calcium oxide and 0.3 tonne of silicon oxide as raw material to the cement production process. The glass fiber WTB tested had an average boron content of 4.5 % in the ash. The effects of this high boron content on the cement and its production process should be evaluated. Co-processing WTBs in cement plants will slightly reduce combustion-related CO 2 emissions due to avoided calcination. It seems feasible to co-process glass-fiber reinforced WTBs in cement production as WTBs provide suitable raw materials and compatible fuel for this process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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