ժҪ To promote sustainability, it has become increasingly vital to properly account material and energy flows in industrial production processes. Therefore, a generic process-level input�Coutput (IO) model was developed to provide an integrated energy (material) accounting and analysis approach for industrial production processes. By extending the existing process level IO models, the production, usage, export and loss of by-products were explicitly considered in the proposed IO model. Moreover, the by-products allocation procedures were incorporated into the proposed IO model to reflect individual contributions of products to energy consumption. Finally, the proposed model enabled calculating embodied energy of main products and total energy consumption under hierarchical accounting scope. Plant managers, energy management consultants, governmental officials and academic researchers could use this input�Coutput model to account material and energy flows, thus calculating energy consumption indicators of a production process with their specific system boundary requirements. The accounting results could be further used for energy labeling, identifying bottlenecks of production activities, evaluating industrial symbiosis effects, improving materials and energy utilization efficiency, etc. The model could also be used as a planning tool to determine the effect that a particular change of technology and supply chains may have on the industrial production processes. The proposed model was tested and applied in a real integrated steel mill, which also provided the reference results for related researches. At last, some concepts, computational issues and limitations of the proposed model were discussed.
Abstract��To promote sustainability, it has become increasingly vital to properly account material and energy flows in industrial production processes. Therefore, a generic process-level input�Coutput (IO) model was developed to provide an integrated energy (material) accounting and analysis approach for industrial production processes. By extending the existing process level IO models, the production, usage, export and loss of by-products were explicitly considered in the proposed IO model. Moreover, the by-products allocation procedures were incorporated into the proposed IO model to reflect individual contributions of products to energy consumption. Finally, the proposed model enabled calculating embodied energy of main products and total energy consumption under hierarchical accounting scope. Plant managers, energy management consultants, governmental officials and academic researchers could use this input�Coutput model to account material and energy flows, thus calculating energy consumption indicators of a production process with their specific system boundary requirements. The accounting results could be further used for energy labeling, identifying bottlenecks of production activities, evaluating industrial symbiosis effects, improving materials and energy utilization efficiency, etc. The model could also be used as a planning tool to determine the effect that a particular change of technology and supply chains may have on the industrial production processes. The proposed model was tested and applied in a real integrated steel mill, which also provided the reference results for related researches. At last, some concepts, computational issues and limitations of the proposed model were discussed.
�ո�����: 2018-05-24
��������: 2018-10-16
����:
Xiao-jun Liu Sheng-ming Liao ? Zheng-hua Rao Gang Liu. An input�Coutput model for energy accounting and analysis of industrial production processes: a case study of an integrated steel plant[J].Journal of Iron and Steel Research International, 2018, 25(5): 524-538.
Xiao-jun Liu Sheng-ming Liao ? Zheng-hua Rao Gang Liu. An input�Coutput model for energy accounting and analysis of industrial production processes: a case study of an integrated steel plant. , 2018, 25(5): 524-538.