Methane yield from switchgrass harvested at different stages of development in Eastern Canada

Citation

Massé, D., Gilbert, Y., Savoie, P., Bélanger, G., Parent, G., Babineau, D. (2010). Methane yield from switchgrass harvested at different stages of development in Eastern Canada. Bioresource Technology, [online] 101(24), 9536-9541. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2010.07.018

Abstract

Mesophilic methane yield of ensiled switchgrass grown in Eastern Canada was assessed. Switchgrass was harvested at three stages of development, corresponding to mid-summer, late summer and early fall in 2007. The regrowth of plots harvested in mid-summer was also harvested in early fall as a two-cut strategy. Specific methane yields decreased significantly with crop maturity from 0.266 to 0.309 NL CH4g-1 VS in mid-summer to 0.191-0.250 NL CH4g-1 VS in early fall; values were similar for the first harvest in late July and the second harvest (regrowth) in October. Approximately 25% more methane was produced by hectare for the two-cut strategy (2.90-3.44×106NL CH4ha-1) compared to the one-cut strategy with a harvest in late summer (2.28-2.77×106NL CH4ha-1). Methane yields from switchgrass grown under the cool humid climate of Eastern Canada suggest that this crop remains an interesting renewable alternative energy source. © 2010.

Publication date

2010-12-01

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