A two-stage stochastic model for co-firing biomass supply chain networks

被引:19
作者
Aranguren, Maria
Castillo-Villar, Krystel K. [1 ]
Aboytes-Ojeda, Mario
机构
[1] Univ Texas San Antonio, Mech Engn Dept, One UTSA Circle, San Antonio, TX 78249 USA
基金
美国食品与农业研究所;
关键词
Optimization; Stochastic programming; Hub-and-spoke; Biomass; Supply chain; Metaheuristic; Simulated annealing; DESIGN; OPTIMIZATION; BENEFITS;
D O I
10.1016/j.jclepro.2021.128582
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
A sustainable alternative to fossil fuels is biomass. The design of cost-efficient biomass networks is necessary to compete with nonrenewable resources. The creation of integrated biomass supply chain (BSC) network design models and solution procedures can contribute to the achievement of this goal. In particular, the emerging bioenergy industry must take advantage of the economies of scale in transportation to minimize the final product's cost. Hub-and-spoke networks have been proposed as a modeling approach to design large scale BSCs. The majority of these models are deterministic and do not consider the inherent variability in the biomass feedstock, such as physical and chemical properties that affect transportation, the effects of future climate on the biomass supply, overall cost, and production operations. Levels of ash and moisture are directly related to the quality of the feedstock, which negatively affects production of biofuels, increasing transportation and handling costs as well as the burden on the BSC's efficiency. Varying weather affects biomass yield, which creates a fluctuation in the incoming supply into the network, creating a complex large scale Newsvendors Problem. In this paper, a stochastic hub-and-spoke network model and an efficient solution are proposed to minimize logistical costs by finding an optimal production and distribution network as well as optimal transportation while reducing computational burden by using metaheuristics, such as Simulated Annealing, when solving large NP-hard instances. The proposed solution procedure was compared to recent benchmark models, i.e. Bender's Decomposition, yielding an overall solution difference of less than 7.71% and average reduction time difference of 91.4%. Case studies with several scenarios based on varying weather conditions were created using realistic data from the northeast region of the U.S.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 36 条
[11]   Integrated assessment of biomass supply and demand in climate change mitigation scenarios [J].
Daioglou, Vassilis ;
Doelman, Jonathan C. ;
Wicke, Birka ;
Faaij, Andre ;
van Vuuren, Detlef P. .
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2019, 54 :88-101
[12]   Effects of supply chain structure and biomass prices on bioenergy feedstock supply [J].
De Laporte, Aaron V. ;
Weersink, Alfons J. ;
McKenney, Daniel W. .
APPLIED ENERGY, 2016, 183 :1053-1064
[13]   A conditional p-hub location problem with attraction functions [J].
Eiselt, H. A. ;
Marianov, Vladimir .
COMPUTERS & OPERATIONS RESEARCH, 2009, 36 (12) :3128-3135
[14]  
esri, 2020, ARCGIS DESKT ARCMAP
[15]   Biomass supply chain network design: An optimization-oriented review and analysis [J].
Ghaderi, Hamid ;
Pishvaee, Mir Saman ;
Moini, Alireza .
INDUSTRIAL CROPS AND PRODUCTS, 2016, 94 :972-1000
[16]  
Griffith A.P., 2010, COST PRODUCING SWITC
[17]  
Hart Jonathan., 2016, Biomass supply chain logistics for co-firing coal power plants
[18]  
Jaap Koppejan., 2008, The Handbook of Biomass Combustion and Cofiring
[19]  
Kenney KL, 2013, BIOFUELS-UK, V4, P111, DOI [10.4155/BFS.12.83, 10.4155/bfs.12.83]
[20]   Simulating Alamo switchgrass with the ALMANAC model [J].
Kiniry, JR ;
Sanderson, MA ;
Williams, JR ;
Tischler, CR ;
Hussey, MA ;
Ocumpaugh, WR ;
Read, JC ;
VanEsbroeck, G ;
Reed, RL .
AGRONOMY JOURNAL, 1996, 88 (04) :602-606