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I want to use openLCA to calculate the carbon emission of 1t pig iron, but I think the calculation result is wrong. 495kg of coke only produces 0.107kg of coke, which is not correct. 0.101kg of CO2 should be the CO2 produced in the process of producing coke. The carbon emission factor of coke should be 3tCO2/t coke, can someone tell me how to calculate the CO2 produced by coke combustion? I want to use openLCA to calculate the carbon emission of 1t pig iron, but I think the calculation result is wrong, 495kg coke only produces 0.107kg coke, which is not correct, right? 0.101kg of CO2 should be the CO2 produced in the process of coke production, and the carbon emission factor of COKE should be 3tCO2/t coke. Can someone tell me how to calculate the CO2 produced by Coke combustion?

in openLCA by (320 points)

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by (8.0k points)
Hello Honortao,

You need a process for comubstion of coke. What you have is the process for producing coke. A process in ecoinvent that shows combustion of coke is:

heat production, at coal coke industrial furnace 1-10MW | heat, district or industrial, other than natural gas | Cutoff, S

Be aware that this process uses energy as a reference unit. If you investigate backwards in the processes, it appears that 0,04 kg of hard coal produces 1 MJ of coke energy. Then scale this up to 495 kg, you get 12.395 MJ of coke. I dont know if this is realistic, but this would be the method to do it.

Furthermore, it seems like you are evaluating the resource consumption of producing coke, not the global warming potential. Resource consumption in many LCIA methods are measured in Sb-eq. You have to choose GWP in the dropdown menu over your results.
by (8.0k points)
Okay. Then i hope it is possible for you to find secondary literature to support your analysis. If this is not possible you will either have to gather primary data, usually in cooperation with a company, or use proxy data with a lower data quality.
The most important thing is that you reflect on the quality of the data points, and the sensitivity of the results, in the interpretation of the analysis.
Good luck
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