Solid-State Anaerobic Co-digestion of Organic Substrates for Biogas Production
Date
2019
Authors
Uma, S.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Solid waste management is an important problem in the developing countries due to
the rapid quantity of waste generation as they urbanize. As the demand increases for
bioenergy, biofuels produced from waste biomass replicates as a supplementary energy
resource to satisfy the requirements. Most of these generated wastes consist of biodegradable
organic matter, which could be utilized as a source for biofuel generation. These
biodegradable wastes are highly opted by suitable treatment method, which is known by
anaerobic biodegradation. This study investigated the performance of organic waste digestion
in laboratory-scale for biogas production. Also, it focuses on the effects of process
parameters such as pH, alkalinity and volatile acids on biogas yield performance by batch and
semi-continuous digestion. Food waste and switchgrass is used as the feedstock in the present
study, which is collected from NITK campus.
The objective (1) of this study aimed to investigate the effects of pretreatment of
switchgrass on biogas production. Switchgrass is used as a feedstock, which is subjected to
physical and chemical pretreatment for batch digestion at mesophilic condition. Batch
experimental results from raw switchgrass yields 248 mL CH4/g VS at mesophilic condition.
The biomethane potential of pretreated SG is 53%, 52% and 12% higher for alkali,
organosolv and thermal pretreatments respectively, and 44% and 20% lower at acid and
liquid hot water pretreatments in comparison to raw SG yield. Highest biomethane yield
confirms the enhanced biodegradability of switchgrass by alkaline and organosolv
pretreatments.
The objective (2) aimed at co-digesting the food waste (FW) and switchgrass (SG) by
batch and semi-continuous mode for biogas production. The performance of batch codigestion is determined with FW and SG as a feedstock with different mix ratio (0:1; 1:1; 0:1
FW: SG) at mesophilic and thermophilic temperatures. Semi-continuous digestion is
conducted by varying the loading from 4-8 g/L with mix ratios (100:0, 12:88, 25:75, 50:50
and 0:100 FW: SG) at mesophilic conditions. The process parameters (pH, alkalinity and
volatile fatty acids) are monitored frequently for their interactive effects on biogas production
by batch and semi-continuous digestion.iv
The highest methane yield is observed with 1:1 FW: SG as 267 mL/g VS at
mesophilic (32-day retention time) and 234 mL/g VS at thermophilic (18-day retention time)
condition during batch digestion. Methane yield has a positive response on co-digestion and
confirmed by digestion performance index (DPI). Results reveal that co-digestion at 1:1 ratio
yields an enhanced performance with both FW and SG in mesophilic as well as thermophilic
condition. This study confirms that the presence of slow and fast biodegradable organic
matters has an equal contribution to methane yield. A t-VFA/Alk ratio maintains the
consistency between acidification and methanation phase. The t-VFA/alk ratio is 0.2 to 0.9
for mesophilic and 0.3-1.5 for thermophilic condition. The release of volatile acids at shorter
retention time is observed with thermophilic owing to, faster hydrolysis than at mesophilic
conditions.
The maximum biogas yield is 628 mL/g VS for 4 g /L loading for semi-continuous
mode. The methane content obtained is around 65% that shows the stable performance at
varying ratios of FW and SG. Average value of methane yield is 320 mL CH4/g VS which is
estimated about 32,000 m3 that produces the energy of 320, 000 kW-h. Results well agreed to
implement the combined heat and power system, as electrical and thermal efficiencies by
35% and 50% are widespread across many countries for the energy conversion.
Description
Keywords
Department of Civil Engineering, Methane yield, biodegradability, digestion performance index, mesophilic, food waste, thermophilic, switchgrass