
Originally Posted by
mcrover
Funny you should say that, the Hallam tip is on our Nth boundry of the golf course and is due to be filled in soon and be turned into a green belt so yeah, run the machines on Methanol.
Can that be done id imagine it could?
It can be done - is being done, for example in a large landfill south of Sydney. It is extremely doubtfull whether it could be done economically on a small (less than megawatts) scale though. And even there the economics depend on explicit or implicit subsidy
If so how as after you capture it do you compress it?
You don't - you use it to run diesel or turbine engines to generate electricity.
Compressed does it liquify?
No. Not at normal temperatures. The methane generated is the same as natural gas, liquified by cooling for export. Has to be done on a very large scale to be economical - and on this scale the capital involved is beyond all but the very largest companies. It can also be converted to methanol, a process that is less efficient, but less capital intensive. Still has to run on a scale of at least hundreds of tonnes a day to be economic.
How does it burn?
Same as compressed natural gas, or the stuff that comes out of the pipes in some cities round the country.
Hope the above answers your questions.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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