Purpose: Elementary flows are essential components of data used for life cycle assessment. A standard list is not used across all sources, as data providers now manage these flows independently. Elementary flows must be consistent across a life cycle inventory for accurate inventory analysis and must correspond with impact methods for impact assessment. With the goal of achieving a global network of LCA databases, a critical review of elementary flow usage and management in LCA data sources was performed.
Methods: Flows were collected in a standard template from various life cycle inventory, impact method, and software sources. A typology of elementary flows was created to identify flows by types such as chemicals, minerals, land flows, etc. to facilitate differential analysis. Twelve criteria were defined to evaluate flows against principles of clarity, consistency, extensibility, translatability, and uniqueness.
Results And Discussion: Over 134,000 elementary flows from five LCI databases, three LCIA methods, and four LCA software tools were collected and evaluated from European, North American, and Asian Pacific LCA sources. The vast majority were typed as "Element or Compound" or "Group of Chemicals" with less than 10% coming from the other seven types Many lack important identifying information including context information (environmental compartments), directionality (LCIA methods generally do not provide this information), additional clarifiers such as CAS numbers and synonyms, unique identifiers (like UUIDs), and supporting metadata. Extensibility of flows is poor because patterns in flow naming are generally complex and inconsistent because user defined nomenclature is used.
Conclusions: The current shortcomings in flow clarity, consistency, and extensibility are likely to make it more challenging for users to properly select and use elementary flows when creating LCA data and make translation/conversion between different reference lists challenging and loss of information will likely occur.
Recommendations: We recommend the application of a typology to flow lists, use of unique identifiers and inclusion of clarifiers based on external references, setting an exclusive or inclusive nomenclature for flow context information that includes directionality and environmental compartment information, separating flowable names from context and unit information, linking inclusive taxonomies to create limited patterns for flowable names, and using an encoding schema that will prevent technical translation errors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11367-017-1354-3 | DOI Listing |
Int J Life Cycle Assess
March 2024
Center for Environmental Solutions and Emergency Response, US Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Purpose: Limited availability of life cycle assessment (LCA) data poses a significant challenge to its mainstream adoption, rendering it a central issue within the LCA community. The Global LCA Data Access (GLAD) network aims to increase the accessibility and interoperability of LCA data and offers benefits for different use cases. GLAD is an intergovernmental collaboration involving different stakeholders organized into working groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Ind Ecol
December 2024
Industrial Ecology Programme, Department of Energy and Process Engineering Norwegian University of Science and Technology Trondheim Norway.
Extending multi-regional input-output (MRIO) models with spatially explicit life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) models allows practitioners to quantify biodiversity impacts at every step of global supply chains. Inconsistencies may be introduced, however, when high-resolution characterization factors (CFs) are aggregated so as to match the low spatial granularity of MRIO models. These aggregation errors are greater when CFs are aggregated via proxies, such as ecoregion land shares, instead of based on spatially explicit elementary stressor flows.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFData Brief
December 2024
Chair of Aerodynamics and Fluid Mechanics, Technical University of Munich, Boltzmannstr. 15, 85748 Garching, Germany.
Common validation and verification test cases for compressible flow solvers are only one- or two-dimensional. Such flows, however, are inherently three-dimensional. The provided data contains simulation results of genuine three-dimensional Riemann problems computed with the open-source compressible flow solver ALPACA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft Matter
July 2024
The Academy of Bradylogists, France.
Mechanics studies the relationships between space, time, and matter. These relationships can be expressed in terms of the dimensions of length , time , and mass . Each dimension broadens the scope of mechanics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioresour Technol
August 2024
Tsinghua Shenzhen International Graduate School, Tsinghua University, Shenzhen 518055, China. Electronic address:
Anaerobic digestion of food waste can recover carbon in the form of biogas, while the high concentration of ammonia nitrogen in the digestion effluent becomes troublesome. Therefore, some new treatment plants use three-phase centrifugation to separate homogenized food waste into nitrogen-rich fine slag for insect cultivation and carbon-rich liquid for anaerobic digestion. To analyze the effects of the carbon-nitrogen separation, an upgraded plant's material and elementary flows were investigated.
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