
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
A
Alcohol - The family name of a group of organic chemical
compounds composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
The molecules in the series vary in chain length and
are composed of a hydrocarbon plus a hydroxyl group.
Alcohol includes methanol and ethanol.
Anaerobic digestion - Decomposition of biological wastes
by micro-organisms, usually under wet conditions, in
the absence of air (oxygen), to produce a gas comprising
mostly methane and carbon dioxide.
Annual removals - The net volume of growing stock trees
removed from the inventory during a specified year by
harvesting, cultural operations such as timber stand
improvement, or land clearing.
ASABE Standard X593 - The American Society of Agricultural
and Biological Engineers (ASABE) in 2005 produced a new
standard (Standard X593) entitled “Terminology
and Definitions for Biomass Production, Harvesting and
Collection, Storage, Processing, Conversion and Utilization.” The
purpose of the standard is to provide uniform terminology
and definitions in the general area of biomass production
and utilization. This standard includes many terminologies
that are used in biomass feedstock production, harvesting,
collecting, handling, storage, pre-processing and conversion,
bioenergy, biopower and bioproducts. The terminologies
were reviewed by many experts from all of the different
fields of biomass and bioenergy before being accepted
as part of the standard. The full-text is included on
the online Technical Library of ASABE (http://asae.frymulti.com/);
members and institutions holding a site license can access
the online version. Print copies may be ordered for a
fee by calling 269-429-0300, e-mailing http://cta.ornl.gov/bedb/martin@asabe.org,
or by mail at: ASABE, 2950 Niles Rd., St. Joseph, MI
49085.
Asexual reproduction - The naturally occurring ability
of some plant species to reproduce asexually through
seeds, meaning the embryos develop without a male gamete.
This ensures the seeds will produce plants identical
to the mother plant.
B
Barrel of oil equivalent - (boe) The amount of energy
contained in a barrel of crude oil, i.e. approximately
6.1 GJ (5.8 million Btu), equivalent to 1,700 kWh.
A "petroleum barrel" is a liquid measure
equal to 42 U.S. gallons (35 Imperial gallons or 159
liters); about 7.2 barrels are equivalent to one tonne
of oil (metric).
Biobased product - The term 'biobased product,' as defined
by Farm Security and Rural Investment Act (FSRIA), means
a product determined by the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture
to be a commercial or industrial product (other than
food or feed) that is composed, in whole or in significant
part, of biological products or renewable domestic agricultural
materials (including plant, animal, and marine materials)
or forestry materials.
Biochemical conversion - The use of fermentation or
anaerobic digestion to produce fuels and chemicals from
organic sources.
Biodiesel - Fuel derived from vegetable oils or animal
fats. It is produced when a vegetable oil or animal fat
is chemically reacted with an alcohol.
Bioenergy - Useful, renewable energy produced from organic
matter - the conversion of the complex carbohydrates
in organic matter to energy. Organic matter may either
be used directly as a fuel, processed into liquids and
gasses, or be a residual of processing and conversion.
Bioethanol - Ethanol produced from biomass feedstocks.
This includes ethanol produced from the fermentation
of crops, such as corn, as well as cellulosic ethanol
produced from woody plants or grasses.
Biorefinery - A facility that processes and converts
biomass into value-added products. These products can
range from biomaterials to fuels such as ethanol or important
feedstocks for the production of chemicals and other
materials. Biorefineries can be based on a number of
processing platforms using mechanical, thermal, chemical,
and biochemical processes.
Biofuels - Fuels made from biomass resources, or their
processing and conversion derivatives. Biofuels include
ethanol, biodiesel, and methanol.
Biogas - A combustible gas derived from decomposing
biological waste under anaerobic conditions. Biogas normally
consists of 50 to 60 percent methane. See also landfill
gas.
Biomass - Any organic matter that is available on a
renewable or recurring basis, including agricultural
crops and trees, wood and wood residues, plants (including
aquatic plants), grasses, animal manure, municipal residues,
and other residue materials. Biomass is generally produced
in a sustainable manner from water and carbon dioxide
by photosynthesis. There are three main categories of
biomass - primary, secondary, and tertiary.
Biomass energy - See Bioenergy.
Biopower - The use of biomass feedstock to produce electric
power or heat through direct combustion of the feedstock,
through gasification and then combustion of the resultant
gas, or through other thermal conversion processes. Power
is generated with engines, turbines, fuel cells, or other
equipment.
Biorefinery - A facility that processes and converts
biomass into value-added products. These products can
range from biomaterials to fuels such as ethanol or important
feedstocks for the production of chemicals and other
materials. Biorefineries can be based on a number of
processing platforms using mechanical, thermal, chemical,
and biochemical processes.
Bone dry - Having zero percent moisture content. Wood
heated in an oven at a constant temperature of 100°C
(212°F) or above until its weight stabilizes is considered
bone dry or oven dry.
Bottoming cycle - A cogeneration system in which steam
is used first for process heat and then for electric
power production.
Black liquor - Solution of lignin-residue and the pulping
chemicals used to extract lignin during the manufacture
of paper.
British thermal unit - (Btu) A non-metric unit of heat,
still widely used by engineers. One Btu is the heat energy
needed to raise the temperature of one pound of water
from 60°F to 61°F at one atmosphere pressure.
1 Btu = 1055 joules (1.055 kJ).
Bunker - A storage tank.
C
Carbon dioxide (CO2) - A colorless, odorless, non-poisonous
gas that is a normal part of the ambient air. Carbon
dioxide is a product of fossil fuel combustion.
Closed-loop biomass - Crops grown, in a sustainable
manner, for the purpose of optimizing their value for
bioenergy and bioproduct uses. This includes annual crops
such as maize and wheat, and perennial crops such as
trees, shrubs, and grasses such as switchgrass.
Coarse materials - Wood residues suitable for chipping,
such as slabs, edgings, and trimmings.
Commercial species - Tree species suitable for industrial
wood products.
Conservation reserve program - CRP provides farm owners
or operators with an annual per-acre rental payment and
half the cost of establishing a permanent land cover
in exchange for retiring environmentally sensitive cropland
from production for 10 to 15 years. In 1996, Congress
reauthorized CRP for an additional round of contracts,
limiting enrollment to 36.4 million acres at any time.
The 2002 Farm Act increased the enrollment limit to 39
million acres. Producers can offer land for competitive
bidding based on an Environmental Benefits Index (EBI)
during periodic signups, or can automatically enroll
more limited acreages in practices such as riparian buffers,
field windbreaks, and grass strips on a continuous basis.
CRP is funded through the Commodity Credit Corporation
(CCC).
Cord - A stack of wood comprising 128 cubic feet (3.62
m^3); standard dimensions are 4 x 4 x 8 feet, including
air space and bark. One cord contains approx. 1.2 U.S.
tons (oven-dry) = 2400 pounds = 1089 kg.
Cropland - Total cropland includes five components:
cropland harvested, crop failure, cultivated summer fallow,
cropland used only for pasture, and idle cropland.
Cropland used for crops - Cropland used for crops includes
cropland harvested, crop failure, and cultivated summer
fallow. Cropland harvested includes row crops and closely
sown crops; hay and silage crops; tree fruits, small
fruits, berries, and tree nuts; vegetables and melons;
and miscellaneous other minor crops. In recent years,
farmers have double-cropped about 4 percent of this acreage.
Crop failure consists mainly of the acreage on which
crops failed because of weather, insects, and diseases,
but includes some land not harvested due to lack of labor,
low market prices, or other factors. The acreage planted
to cover and soil improvement crops not intended for
harvest is excluded from crop failure and is considered
idle. Cultivated summer fallow refers to cropland in
sub-humid regions of the West cultivated for one or more
seasons to control weeds and accumulate moisture before
small grains are planted. This practice is optional in
some areas, but it is a requirement for crop production
in the drier cropland areas of the West. Other types
of fallow, such as cropland planted with soil improvement
crops but not harvested and cropland left idle all year,
are not included in cultivated summer fallow but are
included as idle cropland.
Cropland pasture - Land used for long-term crop rotation.
However, some cropland pasture is marginal for crop uses
and may remain in pasture indefinitely. This category
also includes land that was used for pasture before crops
reached maturity and some land used for pasture that
could have been cropped without additional improvement.
Cull tree - A live tree, 5.0 inches in diameter at breast
height (d.b.h.) or larger that is non-merchantable for
saw logs now or prospectively because of rot, roughness,
or species. (See definitions for rotten and rough trees.)
D
d.b.h. - The diameter measured at approximately breast
high from the ground.
Denatured - In the context of alcohol, it refers to
making alcohol unfit for drinking without impairing its
usefulness for other purposes.
Digester - An airtight vessel or enclosure in which
bacteria decomposes biomass in water to produce biogas.
Discount rate - A rate used to convert future costs
or benefits to their present value.
Downdraft gasifier - A gasifier in which the product
gases pass through a combustion zone at the bottom of
the gasifier.
Dutch oven furnace - One of the earliest types of furnaces,
having a large, rectangular box lined with firebrick
(refractory) on the sides and top. Commonly used for
burning wood. Heat is stored in the refractory and radiated
to a conical fuel pile in the center of the furnace.
E
Effluent - The liquid or gas discharged from a process
or chemical reactor, usually containing residues from
that process.
Emissions - Waste substances released into the air or
water. See also Effluent.
Energy crops - Crops grown specifically for their fuel
value. These include food crops such as corn and sugarcane,
and nonfood crops such as poplar trees and switchgrass.
Currently, two energy crops are under development; short-rotation
woody crops, which are fast-growing hardwood trees harvested
in 5 to 8 years, and herbaceous energy crops, such as
perennial grasses, which are harvested annually after
taking 2 to 3 years to reach full productivity.
Ethanol - Otherwise known as ethyl alcohol, alcohol,
or grain-spirit. A clear, colorless, flammable oxygenated
hydrocarbon with a boiling point of 78.5 degrees Celsius
in the anhydrous state. In transportation, ethanol is
used as a vehicle fuel by itself (E100 – 100% ethanol
by volume), blended with gasoline (E85 – 85% ethanol
by volume), or as a gasoline octane enhancer and oxygenate
(10% by volume).
Externality - A cost or benefit not accounted for in
the price of goods or services. Often "externality" refers
to the cost of pollution and other environmental impacts.
F
Feedstock - A product used as the basis for manufacture
of another product.
Feller-buncher - A self-propelled machine that cuts
trees with giant shears near ground level and then stacks
the trees into piles to await skidding.
Fermentation - Conversion of carbon-containing compounds
by micro-organisms for production of fuels and chemicals
such as alcohols, acids or energy-rich gases.
Fiber products - Products derived from fibers of herbaceous
and woody plant materials. Examples include pulp, composition
board products, and wood chips for export.
Fine materials - Wood residues not suitable for chipping,
such as planer shavings and sawdust.
Firm power - (firm energy) Power which is guaranteed
by the supplier to be available at all times during a
period covered by a commitment. That portion of a customer's
energy load for which service is assured by the utility
provider.
Fluidized-bed boiler - A large, refractory-lined vessel
with an air distribution member or plate in the bottom,
a hot gas outlet in or near the top, and some provisions
for introducing fuel. The fluidized bed is formed by
blowing air up through a layer of inert particles (such
as sand or limestone) at a rate that causes the particles
to go into suspension and continuous motion. The super-hot
bed material increased combustion efficiency by its direct
contact with the fuel.
Fly ash - Small ash particles carried in suspension
in combustion products.
Forest land - Land at least 10 percent stocked by forest
trees of any size, including land that formerly had such
tree cover and that will be naturally or artificially
regenerated. Forest land includes transition zones, such
as areas between heavily forested and nonforested lands
that are at least 10 percent stocked with forest trees
and forest areas adjacent to urban and built-up lands.
Also included are pinyon-juniper and chaparral areas
in the West and afforested areas. The minimum area for
classification of forest land is 1 acre. Roadside, streamside,
and shelterbelt strips of trees must have a crown width
of at least 120 feet to qualify as forest land. Unimproved
roads and trails, streams, and clearings in forest areas
are classified as forest if less than 120 feet wide.
Forest residues - Material not harvested or removed
from logging sites in commercial hardwood and softwood
stands as well as material resulting from forest management
operations such as precommercial thinnings and removal
of dead and dying trees.
Forest health - A condition of ecosystem sustainability
and attainment of management objectives for a given forest
area. Usually considered to include green trees, snags,
resilient stands growing at a moderate rate, and endemic
levels of insects and disease. Natural processes still
function or are duplicated through management intervention.
Fossil fuel - Solid, liquid, or gaseous fuels formed
in the ground after millions of years by chemical and
physical changes in plant and animal residues under high
temperature and pressure. Oil, natural gas, and coal
are fossil fuels.
Fuel cell - A device that converts the energy of a fuel
directly to electricity and heat, without combustion.
Fuel cycle - The series of steps required to produce
electricity. The fuel cycle includes mining or otherwise
acquiring the raw fuel source, processing and cleaning
the fuel, transport, electricity generation, waste management
and plant decommissioning.
Fuel treatment evaluator (FTE) - A strategic assessment
tool capable of aiding the identification, evaluation,
and prioritization of fuel treatment opportunities.
Fuelwood - Wood used for conversion to some form of
energy, primarily for residential use.
Furnace - An enclosed chamber or container used to burn
biomass in a controlled manner to produce heat for space
or process heating.
G
Gasohol - A mixture of 10% anhydrous ethanol and 90%
gasoline by volume; 7.5% anhydrous ethanol and 92.5%
gasoline by volume; or 5.5% anhydrous ethanol and 94.5%
gasoline by volume. There are other fuels that contain
methanol and gasoline, but these fuels are not referred
to as gasohol.
Gas turbine - (combustion turbine) A turbine that converts
the energy of hot compressed gases (produced by burning
fuel in compressed air) into mechanical power. Often
fired by natural gas or fuel oil.
Gasification - A chemical or heat process to convert
a solid fuel to a gaseous form.
Gasifier - A device for converting solid fuel into gaseous
fuel. In biomass systems, the process is referred to
as pyrolitic distillation. See Pyrolysis.
Genetic selection - Application of science to systematic
improvement of a population, e.g. through selective breeding.
Gigawatt - (GW) A measure of electrical power equal
to one billion watts (1,000,000 kW). A large coal or
nuclear power station typically has a capacity of about
1 GW.
Grassland pasture and range - All open land used primarily
for pasture and grazing, including shrub and brush land
types of pasture; grazing land with sagebrush and scattered
mesquite; and all tame and native grasses, legumes, and
other forage used for pasture or grazing. Because of
the diversity in vegetative composition, grassland pasture
and range are not always clearly distinguishable from
other types of pasture and range. At one extreme, permanent
grassland may merge with cropland pasture, or grassland
may often be found in transitional areas with forested
grazing land.
Greenhouse effect - The effect of certain gases in the
Earth's atmosphere in trapping heat from the sun.
Greenhouse gases - Gases that trap the heat of the sun
in the Earth's atmosphere, producing the greenhouse effect.
The two major greenhouse gases are water vapor and carbon
dioxide. Other greenhouse gases include methane, ozone,
chlorofluorocarbons, and nitrous oxide.
Grid - An electric utility company's system for distributing
power.
Growing stock - A classification of timber inventory
that includes live trees of commercial species meeting
specified standards of quality or vigor. Cull trees are
excluded. When associated with volume, includes only
trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger.
H
Habitat - The area where a plant or animal lives and
grows under natural conditions. Habitat includes living
and non-living attributes and provides all requirements
for food and shelter.
Hardwoods - Usually broad-leaved and deciduous trees.
Heat rate - The amount of fuel energy required by a
power plant to produce one kilowatt-hour of electrical
output. A measure of generating station thermal efficiency,
generally expressed in Btu per net kWh. It is computed
by dividing the total Btu content of fuel burned for
electric generation by the resulting net kWh generation.
Heat transfer efficiency - useful heat output released
/ actual heat produced in the firebox.
Heating value - The maximum amount of energy that is
available from burning a substance.
Hectare - Common metric unit of area, equal to 2.47
acres. 100 hectares = 1 square kilometer.
Herbaceous - Non-woody type of vegetation, usually lacking
permanent strong stems, such as grasses, cereals and
canola (rape).
HFCS - High fructose corn syrup.
Higher heating value - (HHV) The maximum potential energy
in dry fuel. For wood, the range is from 7,600 to 9,600
Btu/lb (17.7 to 22.3 GJ/t).
Horsepower - (electrical horsepower; hp) A unit for
measuring the rate of mechanical energy output, usually
used to describe the maximum output of engines or electric
motors. 1 hp = 550 foot-pounds per second = 2,545 Btu
per hour = 745.7 watts = 0.746 kW
Hydrocarbon - A compound containing only hydrogen and
carbon. The simplest and lightest forms of hydrocarbon
are gaseous. With greater molecular weights they are
liquid, while the heaviest are solids.
I
Idle cropland - Land in cover and soil improvement crops,
and cropland on which no crops were planted. Some cropland
is idle each year for various physical and economic
reasons. Acreage diverted from crops to soil-conserving
uses (if not eligible for and used as cropland pasture)
under federal farm programs is included in this component.
Cropland enrolled in the Federal Conservation Reserve
Program (CRP) is included in idle cropland.
Incinerator - Any device used to burn solid or liquid
residues or wastes as a method of disposal. In some incinerators,
provisions are made for recovering the heat produced.
Inclined grate- A type of furnace in which fuel enters
at the top part of a grate in a continuous ribbon, passes
over the upper drying section where moisture is removed,
and descends into the lower burning section. Ash is removed
at the lower part of the grate.
Incremental energy costs - The cost of producing and
transporting the next available unit of electrical energy.
Short run incremental costs (SRIC) include only incremental
operating costs. Long run incremental costs (LRIC) include
the capital cost of new resources or capital equipment.
Independent power producer - A power production facility
that is not part of a regulated utility.
Indirect liquefaction - Conversion of biomass to a liquid
fuel through a synthesis gas intermediate step.
Industrial wood - All commercial roundwood products
except fuelwood.
J
Joule - Metric unit of energy, equivalent to the work
done by a force of one Newton applied over a distance
of one meter (= 1 kg m2/s2). One joule (J) = 0.239
calories (1 calorie = 4.187 J).
K
Kilowatt - (kW) A measure of electrical power equal to
1,000 watts. 1 kW = 3412 Btu/hr = 1.341 horsepower.
See also watt.
Kilowatt hour - (kWh) A measure of energy equivalent
to the expenditure of one kilowatt for one hour. For
example, 1 kWh will light a 100-watt light bulb for 10
hours. 1 kWh = 3412 Btu.
L
Landfill gas - A type of biogas that is generated by
decomposition of organic material at landfill disposal
sites. Landfill gas is approximately 50 percent methane.
See also biogas.
Levelized life-cycle cost - The present value of the
cost of a resource, including capital, financing and
operating costs, expressed as a stream of equal annual
payments. This stream of payments can be converted to
a unit cost of energy by dividing the annual payment
amount by the annual kilowatt-hours produced or saved.
By levelizing costs, resources with different lifetimes
and generating capabilities can be compared.
Lignin - Structural constituent of wood and (to a lesser
extent) other plant tissues, which encrusts the cell
walls and cements the cells together.
Live cull - A classification that includes live cull
trees. When associated with volume, it is the net volume
in live cull trees that are 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and
larger.
Logging residues - The unused portions of growing-stock
and non-growing-stock trees cut or killed by logging
and left in the woods.
M
Megawatt - (MW) A measure of electrical power equal to
one million watts (1,000 kW). See also watt.
Mill/kWh - A common method of pricing electricity in
the U.S. Tenths of a U.S. cent per kilowatt hour.
Mill residue - Wood and bark residues produced in processing
logs into lumber, plywood, and paper.
MMBtu - One million British thermal units.
Moisture content - (MC) The weight of the water contained
in wood, usually expressed as a percentage of weight,
either oven-dry or as received.
Moisture content, dry basis - Moisture content expressed
as a percentage of the weight of oven-dry wood, i.e.:
[(weight of wet sample - weight of dry sample) / weight
of dry sample] x 100
Moisture content, wet basis - Moisture content expressed
as a percentage of the weight of wood as-received, i.e.:
[(weight of wet sample - weight of dry sample) / weight
of wet sample] x 100
Monoculture - The cultivation of a single species crop.
N
Net present value - The sum of the costs and benefits
of a project or activity. Future benefits and costs
are discounted to account for interest costs.
Nitrogen fixation - The transformation of atmospheric
nitrogen into nitrogen compounds that can be used by
growing plants.
Nitrogen oxides (NOx) - A product of combustion of fossil
fuels whose production increases with the temperature
of the process. It can become an air pollutant if concentrations
are excessive.
Noncondensing, controlled extraction
turbine - A turbine
that bleeds part of the main steam flow at one (single
extraction) or two (double extraction) points.
Nonforest land - Land that has never supported forests
and lands formerly forested where use of timber management
is precluded by development for other uses. (Note: Includes
area used for crops, improved pasture, residential areas,
city parks, improved roads of any width and adjoining
clearings, powerline clearings of any width, and 1- to
4.5-acre areas of water classified by the Bureau of the
Census as land. If intermingled in forest areas, unimproved
roads and nonforest strips must be more than 120 feet
wide, and clearings, etc., must be more than 1 acre in
area to qualify as nonforest land.)
Nonattainment area - Any area that does not meet the
national primary or secondary ambient air quality standard
established by the Environmental Protection Agency for
designated pollutants, such as carbon monoxide and ozone.
Nonindustrial private - An ownership class of private
lands where the owner does not operate wood-using processing
plants.
O
Old growth- Timber stands with the following characteristics;
large mature and over-mature trees in the overstory,
snags, dead and decaying logs on the ground, and a
multi-layered canopy with trees of several age classes.
Open-loop biomass - Biomass that can be used to produce
energy and bioproducts even though it was not grown specifically
for this purpose. Examples of open-loop biomass include
agricultural livestock waste and residues from forest
harvesting operations and crop harvesting.
Organic compounds- Chemical compounds based on carbon
chains or rings and also containing hydrogen, with or
without oxygen, nitrogen, and other elements.
Other forest land - Forest land other than timberland
and reserved forest land. It includes available forest
land, which is incapable of annually producing 20 cubic
feet per acre of industrial wood under natural conditions
because of adverse site conditions such as sterile soils,
dry climate, poor drainage, high elevation, steepness,
or rockiness.
Other removals - Unutilized wood volume from cut or
otherwise killed growing stock, from cultural operations
such as precommercial thinnings, or from timberland clearing.
Does not include volume removed from inventory through
reclassification of timberland to productive reserved
forest land.
Other sources - Sources of roundwood products that are
not growing stock. These include salvable dead, rough
and rotten trees, trees of noncommercial species, trees
less than 5.0 inches d.b.h., tops, and roundwood harvested
from non-forest land (for example, fence rows).
Oxygenate - A substance which, when added to gasoline,
increases the amount of oxygen in that gasoline blend.
Includes fuel ethanol, methanol, and methyl tertiary
butyl ether (MTBE).
P
Particulate - A small, discrete mass of solid or liquid
matter that remains individually dispersed in gas or
liquid emissions. Particulates take the form of aerosol,
dust, fume, mist, smoke, or spray. Each of these forms
has different properties.
Photosynthesis - Process by which chlorophyll-containing
cells in green plants concert incident light to chemical
energy, capturing carbon dioxide in the form of carbohydrates.
Pilot scale - The size of a system between the small
laboratory model size (bench scale) and a full-size system.
Poletimber trees - Live trees at least 5.0 inches in
d.b.h. but smaller than sawtimber trees.
Present value - The worth of future receipts or costs
expressed in current value. To obtain present value,
an interest rate is used to discount future receipts
or costs.
Primary wood-using mill - A mill that converts roundwood
products into other wood products. Common examples are
sawmills that convert saw logs into lumber and pulp mills
that convert pulpwood roundwood into wood pulp.
Process heat - Heat used in an industrial process rather
than for space heating or other housekeeping purposes.
Producer gas - Fuel gas high in carbon monoxide (CO)
and hydrogen (H2), produced by burning a solid fuel with
insufficient air or by passing a mixture of air and steam
through a burning bed of solid fuel.
Public utility commissions - State agencies that regulate
investor-owned utilities operating in the state.
Public utility regulatory policies
act - (PURPA) A federal
law requiring a utility to buy the power produced by
a qualifying facility at a price equal to that which
the utility would otherwise pay if it were to build its
own power plant or buy power from another source.
Pulpwood - Roundwood, whole-tree chips, or wood residues
that are used for the production of wood pulp.
Pyrolysis - The thermal decomposition of biomass at
high temperatures (greater than 400° F, or 200° C)
in the absence of air. The end product of pyrolysis is
a mixture of solids (char), liquids (oxygenated oils),
and gases (methane, carbon monoxide, and carbon dioxide)
with proportions determined by operating temperature,
pressure, oxygen content, and other conditions.
Q
Quad: One quadrillion Btu (10^15 Btu) = 1.055 exajoules
(EJ), or approximately 172 million barrels of oil equivalent.
R
Recovery boiler - A pulp mill boiler in which lignin
and spent cooking liquor (black liquor) is burned to
generate steam.
Refractory lining - A lining, usually of ceramic, capable
of resisting and maintaining high temperatures.
Refuse-derived fuel - (RDF) Fuel prepared from municipal
solid waste. Noncombustible materials such as rocks,
glass, and metals are removed, and the remaining combustible
portion of the solid waste is chopped or shredded. RDF
facilities process typically between 100 and 3,000 tons
of MSW per day.
Reserve margin - The amount by which the utility's total
electric power capacity exceeds maximum electric demand.
Residues - Bark and woody materials that are generated
in primary wood-using mills when roundwood products are
converted to other products. Examples are slabs, edgings,
trimmings, sawdust, shavings, veneer cores and clippings,
and pulp screenings. Includes bark residues and wood
residues (both coarse and fine materials) but excludes
logging residues.
Return on investment (ROI) - The interest
rate at which the net present value of a project is zero.
Multiple values are possible.
Rotation - Period of years between establishment of
a stand of timber and the time when it is considered
ready for final harvest and regeneration.
Rotten tree - A live tree of commercial species that
does not contain a saw log now or prospectively primarily
because of rot (that is, when rot accounts for more than
50 percent of the total cull volume).
Rough tree - (a) A live tree of commercial species that
does not contain a saw log now or prospectively primarily
because of roughness (that is, when sound cull, due to
such factors as poor form, splits, or cracks, accounts
for more than 50 percent of the total cull volume) or
(b) a live tree of noncommercial species.
Roundwood products - Logs and other round timber generated
from harvesting trees for industrial or consumer use.
S
Salvable dead tree - A downed or standing dead tree that
is considered currently or potentially merchantable
by regional standards.
Saplings - Live trees 1.0 inch through 4.9 inches in
d.b.h.
Saturated steam- Steam at boiling temperature for a
given pressure.
Secondary wood processing mills - A mill that uses primary
wood products in the manufacture of finished wood products,
such as cabinets, moldings, and furniture.
Shaft horsepower - A measure of the actual mechanical
energy per unit time delivered to a turning shaft. See
also horsepower.
Silviculture - Theory and practice of controlling the
establishment, composition, structure and growth of forests
and woodlands. Sound dead - The net volume in salvable
dead trees.
SRIC - Short rotation intensive culture - the growing
of tree crops for bioenergy or fiber, characterized by
detailed site preparation, usually less than 10 years
between harvests, usually fast-growing hybrid trees and
intensive management (some fertilization, weed and pest
control, and possibly irrigation).
Stand - (of trees) A tree community that possesses sufficient
uniformity in composition, constitution, age, spatial
arrangement, or condition to be distinguishable from
adjacent communities.
Steam turbine - A device for converting
energy of high-pressure steam (produced in a boiler)
into mechanical power which can then be used to generate
electricity.
Superheated steam - Steam which is hotter than boiling
temperature for a given pressure.
Surplus electricity - Electricity produced by cogeneration
equipment in excess of the needs of an associated factory
or business.
Sustainable - An ecosystem condition in which biodiversity,
renewability, and resource productivity are maintained
over time.
Synthetic ethanol - Ethanol produced from ethylene,
a petroleum by-product.
T
Therm - A unit of energy equal to 100,000 Btus (= 105.5
MJ); used primarily for natural gas.
Thermochemical conversion - Use of heat to chemically
change substances from one state to another, e.g. to
make useful energy products.
Timberland - Forest land that is producing or is capable
of producing crops of industrial wood, and that is not
withdrawn from timber utilization by statute or administrative
regulation. Areas qualifying as timberland are capable
of producing more than 20 cubic feet per acre per year
of industrial wood in natural stands. Currently inaccessible
and inoperable areas are included.
Timber Product Output Database
Retrieval System (TPO) - Developed in support of the 1997 Resources Planning
Act (RPA) Assessment, this system acts as an interface
to a standard set of consistently coded TPO data for
each state and county in the country. This set of national
TPO data consists of 11 data variables that describe
for each county the roundwood products harvested, the
logging residues left behind, the timber otherwise removed,
and the wood and bark residues generated by its primary
wood-using mills.
Tipping fee - A fee for disposal of waste.
Ton, Tonne - One U.S. ton (short ton) = 2,000 pounds.
One Imperial ton (long ton or shipping ton) = 2,240 pounds.
One metric tonne(tonne) = 1,000 kilograms (2,205 pounds).
One oven-dry ton or tonne (ODT, sometimes termed bone-dry
ton/tonne) is the amount of wood that weighs one ton/tonne
at 0% moisture content. One green ton/tonne refers to
the weight of undried (fresh) biomass material - moisture
content must be specified if green weight is used as
a fuel measure.
Topping cycle - A cogeneration system in which electric
power is produced first. The reject heat from power production
is then used to produce useful process heat.
Topping and back pressure turbines - Turbines which
operate at exhaust pressure considerably higher than
atmospheric (noncondensing turbines). These turbines
are often multistage types with relatively high efficiency.
Transmission - The process of long-distance
transport of electrical energy, generally accomplished
by raising the electric current to high voltages.
Traveling grate - A type of furnace
in which assembled links of grates are joined together
in a perpetual belt arrangement. Fuel is fed in at one
end and ash is discharged at the other.
Turbine - A machine for converting the heat energy in
steam or high temperature gas into mechanical energy.
In a turbine, a high velocity flow of steam or gas passes
through successive rows of radial blades fastened to
a central shaft.
Turn down ratio- The lowest load at which a boiler will
operate efficiently as compared to the boiler's maximum
design load.
U
V
W
Waste streams - Unused solid or liquid by-products of
a process.
Water-cooled vibrating grate - A boiler grate made up
of a tuyere grate surface mounted on a grid of water
tubes interconnected with the boiler circulation system
for positive cooling. The structure is supported by flexing
plates allowing the grid and grate to move in a vibrating
action. Ashes are automatically discharged.
Watershed - The drainage basin contributing water, organic
matter, dissolved nutrients, and sediments to a stream
or lake.
Watt - The common base unit of power in the metric system.
One watt equals one joule per second, or the power developed
in a circuit by a current of one ampere flowing through
a potential difference of one volt. One Watt = 3.412
Btu/hr. See also kilowatt.
Wheeling - The process of transferring electrical energy
between buyer and seller by way of an intermediate utility
or utilities.
Whole-tree harvesting - A harvesting method in which
the whole tree (above the stump) is removed.
X
Y
Yarding - The initial movement of logs from the point
of felling to a central loading area or landing.
Z