Calorific Value of Rubberwood Biomass Along the Tree

Authors

  • Gladys Ama Quartey Department of Interior Design and Technology Faculty of Built and Natural Environment Takoradi Technical University. P. O. Box 256. Takoradi
  • John Frank Eshun Department of Interior Design and Technology Faculty of Built and Natural Environment Takoradi Technical University. P. O. Box 256. Takoradi
  • Eric Donkor Marfo Department of Interior Design and Technology Faculty of Built and Natural Environment Takoradi Technical University. P. O. Box 256. Takoradi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14738/aivp.105.13085

Keywords:

Rubberwood, Biomass, Calorific Value, Fuelwood, Renewable energy

Abstract

Rubberwood is one of the major plantation crops grown mainly in the Western Region of Ghana. They are mostly utilised for their latex. Rubber trees that are aged and low yielding can be cut down and properly utilised as fuelwood. In Ghana, there is a high demand for fuelwood in most domestic homes and rubberwood is one of the tree species with potential use as fuelwood. Even though gas has been promoted as an energy source for heating and cooking activities in Ghana, it remains expensive, and its affordability, therefore, remains out of reach of many people. Rubberwood, which is plantation grown can, therefore, be considered as fuelwood. In this study, the calorific values of rubberwood biomass from a plantation were determined using samples from the bottom, middle, branch, and top parts of the stem. The calorific values of rubber wood biomass from different sections of the tree were determined in accordance with standard laboratory methods using a bomb calorimeter. The calorific values obtained were 17.194 MJ/kg for the branch, 17.225 MJ/kg for the top, 17.595 MJ/kg for the middle, and 17.702 MJ/kg for the bottom. The trend of the values shows that the calorific value decreases from the bottom through the top of the stem to the branch. The calorific value of rubberwood was comparable to other high-performing tree species used for fuelwoods and therefore has the potential to be used for fuelwood.

References

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Published

2022-09-10

How to Cite

Quartey, G. A., Eshun, J. F., & Marfo, E. D. (2022). Calorific Value of Rubberwood Biomass Along the Tree. European Journal of Applied Sciences, 10(5), 11–14. https://doi.org/10.14738/aivp.105.13085