1Adrian R. Ramos, 2Hazel Ann S. Acuña, 3Jayka Vielenar P. Ramirez, 4Regine B. Palmes, 5Anwar I. Kolong
1,2,3,4STEM students, MBHTE-Concepcion National High School
5SST-I, MBTE- Concepcion National High School
DOI : https://doi.org/10.47191/ijmra/v7-i05-47Google Scholar Download Pdf
ABSTRACT:
In the face of rising fuel costs and environmental concerns, the need for alternate energy sources is growing. Charcoal, generated from animal and vegetable sources, has emerged as a viable alternative fuel. Briquetting, which compresses organic materials into compact briquettes, offers an environmentally responsible solution for waste management and energy production in the Philippines. Basilan, noted for its agricultural methods, generates a substantial amount of agricultural waste, including rubberwood sawdust (RBS) and Rubber Tree Leaves which is perfect for briquette production due to its lignocellulose content. Charcoal briquettes, made of charcoal fines and binder, are an economical, smokeless, and long-lasting fuel option which may poses sustainable solution as the conventional method of charcoal manufacture, which involves tree felling, poses ecological concerns. This exploratory experimental design study investigates the viability and possibility of utilizing biocharcoal from dried leaves of rubber trees and rubberwood sawdust (Hevea brasiliensis) as an environmentally benign and cost-effective option. This study intends to create a sustainable cooking fuel alternative to standard charcoal by reusing agricultural trash. The study aims to developed briquettes and assesses their physical characteristics such durability, efficiency, kindling time, burning time, and heating quality to three identified evaluators. Overall, the positive responses from those who were interviewed shed light on the promising potential of rubber sawdust charcoal briquettes (x̄=4.8 (liked very much)) and rubber tree leaves (x̄=4.23 (liked very much)) as a viable and environmentally friendly energy source for applications involving heating and cooking. Due to limited laboratory apparatuses, researchers recommended for a further evaluation of the developed briquettes such doing proximate analysis (e.g. measuring the moisture and ash content) established strong data to support the existing data.
KEYWORDS:Briquettes, Energy, Development, Hedonic scale, Sustainable Development
REFERENCES1) Arayata, Ma.,C., (2022). DOST urges LGUs to learn charcoal briquetting. November 18, 2020. https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1188950
2) Basilan. (2024, February 12). In Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basilan
3) Ecoport, 2009. Ecoport database. Ecoport. Retrieved from: https://www.feedipedia.org/node/1635
4) El-Haggar, S. M. (2006). Sustainability of Agricultural and Rural Waste Management. Sustainable Industrial Design and Waste Management, 223-260. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-012373623-9/50009-5
5) Kataki, R., & Kataki, M. D. (2021). Weeds as a renewable bioresource: Prospects for bioconversion to biofuels and biomaterials through a cascade of approaches. Biofuels and Bioenergy, 437-461. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-323-85269-2.00021-6
6) Khorasgani, N.B., Sengul, A.B. & Asmatulu, E. Briquetting grass and tree leaf biomass for sustainable production of future fuels. Biomass Conv. Bioref. 10, 915–924 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13399-019-00465-7
7) Narzary, A., & Das, A. K. (2022, August). Study of effects of addition of charcoal and binder derived from taro on physiochemical properties of briquettes made from tree leaves. Sustainable Energy Technologies and Assessments, 52, 102119. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.seta.2022.102119
8) Patil, R. A., Deshannavar, U. B., Ramasamy, M., Emani, S., Issakhov, A., & Khalilpoor, N. (2021, May 26). Briquetting of Dry Sugarcane Leaves by Using Press Mud, Cow Dung, and Buffalo Dung as Binders. International Journal of Chemical Engineering, 2021, 1–12. https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/8608215
9) Romallosa, A. R., & Kraft, E. (2017). Feasibility of Biomass Briquette Production from Municipal Waste Streams by Integrating the Informal Sector in the Philippines. Resources, 6(1), 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources6010012
10) Shakir, A., Ahmad, M.,I., Yusup, Y., Rafatullah, M., (2023).From waste to wealth: converting rubber wood sawdust into green mycelium-based composite. Biomass conversion and biorefinery . 10.1007/s13399-023-05113-9
Volume 07 Issue 05 May 2024
There is an Open Access article, distributed under the term of the Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits remixing, adapting and building upon the work for non-commercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
Our Services and Policies
Authors should prepare their manuscripts according to the instructions given in the authors' guidelines. Manuscripts which do not conform to the format and style of the Journal may be returned to the authors for revision or rejected.
The Journal reserves the right to make any further formal changes and language corrections necessary in a manuscript accepted for publication so that it conforms to the formatting requirements of the Journal.
International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Analysis will publish 12 monthly online issues per year,IJMRA publishes articles as soon as the final copy-edited version is approved. IJMRA publishes articles and review papers of all subjects area.
Open access is a mechanism by which research outputs are distributed online, Hybrid open access journals, contain a mixture of open access articles and closed access articles.
International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Analysis initiate a call for research paper for Volume 07 Issue 12 (December 2024).
PUBLICATION DATES:
1) Last Date of Submission : 26 December 2024 .
2) Article published within a week.
3) Submit Article : editor@ijmra.in or Online
Why with us
1 : IJMRA only accepts original and high quality research and technical papers.
2 : Paper will publish immediately in current issue after registration.
3 : Authors can download their full papers at any time with digital certificate.
The Editors reserve the right to reject papers without sending them out for review.
Authors should prepare their manuscripts according to the instructions given in the authors' guidelines. Manuscripts which do not conform to the format and style of the Journal may be returned to the authors for revision or rejected. The Journal reserves the right to make any further formal changes and language corrections necessary in a manuscript accepted for publication so that it conforms to the formatting requirements of the Journal.