| Literature DB >> 30426308 |
Ian J MacDonald1,2, Satish B Mohan3.
Abstract
This research has developed mathematical models for computing lifetime greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with materials. The models include embodied carbon (EC) emissions from the manufacture of materials, and GHG emissions from incineration, or landfill gas (LFG) production from landfill disposal of the material beyond their service lives. The models are applicable to all materials; however, their applications here are demonstrated for the lumber from a residential building with 50- and 100-year service lives, and with incineration, landfill, and deconstruction as end-of-life treatments. This paper introduces a new metric for lifetime GHG emissions associated with materials termed "Global Warming Impact of Materials (GWIM)." The GWIM is subdivided into two portions: (i) productive portion (GWIMp) that includes the materials' emissions until the service life of the facility and (ii) non-productive portion (GWIMnp) which includes the materials' GHG emissions beyond the service life until they are eliminated from the atmosphere. In place of the current, static, EC measurements (kgCO2e or MTCO2e), this model reports the GWIMs in units of kgCO2e-years or MTCO2e-years, which includes the effects of "time of use" of a facility. Using the models, this paper has computed GHG reductions by deconstruction, with material recoveries of 30%, 50%, and 70% at demolition for reuse, recycle, or repurpose. A 70% material recovery, after a 50-year service life of the building, affected a savings of 47% and 52% if the remaining 30% debris was incinerated or landfilled respectively. All of the values computed using models checked out with manual calculations.Entities:
Keywords: Building materials; Deconstruction; Global Warming Impact of Materials (GWIM); Global warming; Global warming potential (GWP); Mathematical modeling
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30426308 PMCID: PMC6244974 DOI: 10.1007/s10661-018-7050-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Monit Assess ISSN: 0167-6369 Impact factor: 2.513
Fig. 1CSTR model of greenhouse gas emissions associated with building materials
Variables and constants used in modeling GHG emissions
| Symbol | Definition | Units |
|---|---|---|
|
| GHG concentration in the atmosphere | Mass/vol |
|
| Volume of the Earth’s atmosphere | Vol (L) |
|
| Change in concentration of GHG in Earth’s atmosphere | Mass/vol s |
|
| Change in concentration of carbon dioxide in Earth’s atmosphere | Mass/vol s |
|
| Change in concentration of methane in Earth’s atmosphere | Mass/vol s |
|
| Rate of flow out of the atmosphere | Vol/time |
|
| Atmospheric residence time of GHG. | Time (years) |
|
| Atmospheric residence time of carbon dioxide | Time (years) |
|
| Atmospheric residence time of methane | Time (years) |
|
| Time since the manufacture of a building material | Time (years) |
|
| Time of demolition of the building | Time (years) |
| EC | Embodied carbon. Amount of carbon emitted per mass of building material manufactured | Mass CO2/mass material |
| EC( | Time-dependent embodied carbon of a building material | Mass CO2/mass material |
| ECbio | Embodied biogenic carbon or the carbon stored in an organic materials such as wood or plastic | Mass CO2/mass material |
| EC( | Time-dependent embodied biogenic carbon of a building material | Mass CO2/mass material |
| [CO2] | Carbon dioxide concentration | Mass/vol |
| [CO2] | Carbon dioxide concentration as a function of time | Mass/vol |
| [CH4] | Methane concentration | Mass/vol |
| [CH4]( | Methane concentration as a function of time | Mass/vol |
| [LFG] | Landfill gas concentration [LFG] = [CO2] + [CH4] | Mass/vol |
|
| Mass of biodegradable C&D disposed of in landfills | Mass (kg) |
|
| Methane generating potential of biodegradable in landfills | Vol/mass |
|
| Decay rate of biodegradable materials in landfills | 1/time |
|
| LFG pressure in landfill | Pressure (atm) |
| mwCO2 | Molecular weight of carbon dioxide | Mass/mol |
| mwCH4 | Molecular weight of methane | Mass/mol |
|
| Ideal gas law constant | Vol·pressure/mol·temp |
|
| Temperature inside a landfill | Temp (K) |
|
| Percentage of methane in landfill gas | Percent (%) |
|
| Flow rate of methane out of the atmosphere | Vol/time |
|
|
|
Fig. 2a Lifetime GHG emissions associated with building materials for embodied carbon (EC) (TDemo = 50 years). b Lifetime GHG emissions associated with building materials for embodied carbon (EC) (TDemo = 100 years)
Fig. 3a Lifetime GHG emissions associated with building materials for EC and incineration as end-of-life treatment of demolition debris (TDemo = 50) years). b Lifetime GHG emissions associated with building materials for EC and incineration as end-of-life treatment of demolition debris (TDemo = 100 years)
Fig. 4a Lifetime GHG emissions associated with building materials for EC and landfill disposal as end-of-life treatment of demolition debris (TDemo = 50 years). b Lifetime GHG emissions associated with building materials for EC and landfill disposal as end-of-life treatment of demolition debris (TDemo = 100 years) years
Fig. 5a The Global Warming Impact of Materials (GWIM) for 48,920 BF of lumber from the example house. Deconstruction with 30%, 50%, and 70% recovery (TDemo = 50 years). b The Global Warming Impact of Materials (GWIM) for 48,920 BF of lumber from the example house. Deconstruction with 30%, 50%, and 70% recovery (TDemo = 100 years)
Global warming impact of materials in kgCO2e-years (×105) for (i) three end-of-life treatments, (ii) service lives (TDemo) of 50 and 100 years, and (iii) deconstruction with material recovery at 30, 50, and 70%
| EC and end-of-life treatments | GWIM | GWIMp | GWIMnp | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EC only | 21.9 | 21.9 | 7.2 | 12.1 | 14.6 | 9.8 |
| EC and incineration | 66.2 (+ 202%)b | 66.0 (+ 201%)b | 7.2 | 12.1 | 58.9 (+ 303%)b | 54.0 (+ 451%)b |
| EC and landfill | 84.3 (+ 285%)b | 84.2 (+ 284%)b | 7.2 | 12.1 | 77.1 (+ 428%)b | 72.1 (+ 636%)b |
| EC & deconstruction (recovery 30%) | ||||||
| Add incinerationa | 52.9 (− 20.0%)c | 52.8 (− 20.0%)c | 11.6 (+ 61.1%)c | 15.0 (+ 24.0%)c | 41.3 (− 29.9%)c | 37.8 (− 30.0%)c |
| Add landfilla | 65.6 (− 22.2%)d | 65.5 (− 22.2%)d | 11.6 (+ 61.1%)d | 15.0 (+ 24.0%)d | 54.0 (− 30%)d | 50.5 (− 30.0%)d |
| EC & deconstruction (recovery 50%) | ||||||
| Add incinerationa | 44.0 (− 33.5%)c | 44.0 (− 33.3%)c | 14.6 (+ 103%)c | 17.0 (+ 40.5%)c | 29.5 (− 49.9%)c | 27.0 (50.0%)c |
| Add landfilla | 53.1 (− 37.0%)d | 53.0 (37.1%)d | 14.6 (+ 103%)d | 17.0 (+ 40.5%)d | 38.5 (− 50.1%)d | 36.1 (50.0%)d |
| EC & deconstruction (recovery 70%) | ||||||
| Add incinerationa | 35.2 (− 46.8%)c | 35.1 (− 46.8%)c | 17.5 (+ 143%)c | 18.9 (+ 56.2%)c | 17.7 (− 69.9%)c | 16.2 (− 70.0%)c |
| Add landfilla | 40.6 (− 51.8%)d | 40.6 (− 51.8%)d | 17.5 (+ 143%)d | 18.9 (+ 56.2%)d | 23.1 (− 70.0%)d | 21.6 (− 70.0%)d |
aIn deconstruction, the material remaining after recovery is either incinerated or landfilled
bPercentage represents change from “EC only”
cPercentage represents change from “EC and incineration”
dPercentage represents change from “EC and landfill”
Fig. 6a GWIM, GWIMp, and GWIMnp values as functions of recovery percentages after deconstruction. Lumber was incinerated, disposed of in a landfill, or deconstructed with 30, 50, or 70% recovery of materials (TDemo = 50 years). b GWIM, GWIMp, and GWIMnp values as functions of recovery percentages after deconstruction. Lumber was incinerated, disposed of in a landfill or deconstructed with 30, 50, or 70% recovery of materials (TDemo = 100 years)