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Cut‐and‐chip harvester material capacity and fuel performance on commercial‐scale willow fields for varying ground and crop conditions
Author(s) -
Eisenbies Mark H.,
Volk Timothy A.,
Souza Daniel P. L.,
Hallen Karl W.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
gcb bioenergy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.378
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1757-1707
pISSN - 1757-1693
DOI - 10.1111/gcbb.12679
Subject(s) - willow , biomass (ecology) , environmental science , crop , growing season , short rotation coppice , fuel efficiency , agronomy , bioenergy , shrub , agricultural engineering , agroforestry , biofuel , engineering , botany , biology , waste management , aerospace engineering
Shrub willow ( Salix spp.) is capable of producing commercially attractive amounts of biomass in short rotations, but harvesting costs and logistics remain a concern. There is a particular need for information about harvesting operations on larger, commercial short‐rotation woody crop systems. Another recent issue on commercial fields in northern New York is commercial growers conducting harvests during the growing season rather than the recommended dormant season when fields may be too wet to harvest. This study evaluated and modeled the in‐field performance of a cut‐and‐chip harvester for almost 700 wagonloads of chips operating in commercial willow fields in a wider array of crop and field conditions than have been previously reported. Analysis indicated that the time of harvest (leaf‐on or leaf‐off) and whether site conditions were wet or dry affected the harvester's material capacity. Mean material capacity was greatest for leaf‐off, dry conditions (71.8 Mg/hr) and lowest for leaf‐on harvests, which were similar for wet (30.4 Mg/hr) and dry conditions (29.7 Mg/hr). Mean crop specific fuel consumption ranged between 1.3 and 3.3 L/Mg, but can get considerably higher for standing biomasses below 40 Mg/ha. Wet ground conditions and leaf‐on harvests tend to decrease material capacity and increase fuel consumption as the harvester has to divert power to forward movement and material processing. Relationships for material capacity and fuel consumption based on standing biomass, time of harvest and ground conditions will be essential for evaluating and modeling the economic and environmental impacts of commercial‐scale willow operations.

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