J
James Scott
Researcher at Aston University
Publications - 18
Citations - 757
James Scott is an academic researcher from Aston University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Supply chain & Renewable energy. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 18 publications receiving 571 citations.
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A review of multi-criteria decision-making methods for bioenergy systems
TL;DR: A review of those academic works attempting to deal with problems arising within the bioenergy sector using multi-criteria decision-making (MCDM) methods is provided in this article.
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A decision support system for supplier selection and order allocation in stochastic, multi-stakeholder and multi-criteria environments
TL;DR: An integrated method for dealing with integrated supplier selection and order allocation using a combined Analytic Hierarchy Process–Quality Function Deployment and chance constrained optimization algorithm approach that selects appropriate suppliers and allocates orders optimally between them is proposed.
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Combined heat and power from the intermediate pyrolysis of biomass materials: performance, economics and environmental impact.
TL;DR: In this article, the system performance, economics and life-cycle environmental impact is analyzed with the aid of the process simulation software Aspen Plus, and the major areas for potential performance improvement are in reactor cost reductions, the reliable use of waste feedstocks and a high value end use for the char byproduct from pyrolysis.
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Developing novel 5th generation district energy networks
A. Revesz,Phil Jones,Chris Dunham,G. Davies,Catarina Marques,Rodrigo Matabuena,James Scott,Graeme Maidment +7 more
TL;DR: Overall, this paper demonstrates that the implementation of the 5G concept results in lower energy costs to consumers while at the same time transforming a large existing urban area to a near zero-carbon energy system in terms of heating, cooling, electricity and transport.
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Strategic sourcing in the UK bioenergy industry
TL;DR: In this paper, the integrated quality function deployment and analytic hierarchy process (QFD-AHP) method is used for the inclusion of a wide group of stakeholder requirements into the supplier selection process.