The paper presents a study on increasing energy independence of a 200 m2 horticultural hothouse, by means of heating it with thermal energy from a TLUD (top-lit-up-draft) gasification procedure of local residual agr...The paper presents a study on increasing energy independence of a 200 m2 horticultural hothouse, by means of heating it with thermal energy from a TLUD (top-lit-up-draft) gasification procedure of local residual agricultural biomass, chopped at 10-50 mm and dried at 10%-15% RH (relative humidity). It produces an average of 14% higt quality biochar. Hot-air heating system and forced circulation are equipped with two GAZMER 40/150G energetic modules, which are rechargeable, simple, safe, efficient and environmentally friendly. They can gasify chopped or pelletised biomass. To study the microclimate evolution, it was used a complex numerical model for a 200 m2 hothouse for growing vegetables. Simulated experiments were carried out for frosty days and, estimated, for the whole warming period. Each year 13.44 t of biomass are consumed, resulting 1.78 t ofbiochar which, when introduced in soil, produces a -6.2 t/year negative balance of CO2.展开更多
文摘The paper presents a study on increasing energy independence of a 200 m2 horticultural hothouse, by means of heating it with thermal energy from a TLUD (top-lit-up-draft) gasification procedure of local residual agricultural biomass, chopped at 10-50 mm and dried at 10%-15% RH (relative humidity). It produces an average of 14% higt quality biochar. Hot-air heating system and forced circulation are equipped with two GAZMER 40/150G energetic modules, which are rechargeable, simple, safe, efficient and environmentally friendly. They can gasify chopped or pelletised biomass. To study the microclimate evolution, it was used a complex numerical model for a 200 m2 hothouse for growing vegetables. Simulated experiments were carried out for frosty days and, estimated, for the whole warming period. Each year 13.44 t of biomass are consumed, resulting 1.78 t ofbiochar which, when introduced in soil, produces a -6.2 t/year negative balance of CO2.