fbpx
Wikipedia

Anaerobic digestion

Anaerobic digestion is a sequence of processes by which microorganisms break down biodegradable material in the absence of oxygen.[1] The process is used for industrial or domestic purposes to manage waste or to produce fuels. Much of the fermentation used industrially to produce food and drink products, as well as home fermentation, uses anaerobic digestion.

Anaerobic digester system in Germany

Anaerobic digestion occurs naturally in some soils and in lake and oceanic basin sediments, where it is usually referred to as "anaerobic activity".[2][3] This is the source of marsh gas methane as discovered by Alessandro Volta in 1776.[4][5]

The digestion process begins with bacterial hydrolysis of the input materials. Insoluble organic polymers, such as carbohydrates, are broken down to soluble derivatives that become available for other bacteria. Acidogenic bacteria then convert the sugars and amino acids into carbon dioxide, hydrogen, ammonia, and organic acids. In acetogenesis, bacteria convert these resulting organic acids into acetic acid, along with additional ammonia, hydrogen, and carbon dioxide amongst other compounds. Finally, methanogens convert these products to methane and carbon dioxide.[6] The methanogenic archaea populations play an indispensable role in anaerobic wastewater treatments.[7]

Anaerobic digestion is used as part of the process to treat biodegradable waste and sewage sludge. As part of an integrated waste management system, anaerobic digestion reduces the emission of landfill gas into the atmosphere. Anaerobic digesters can also be fed with purpose-grown energy crops, such as maize.[8]

Anaerobic digestion is widely used as a source of renewable energy. The process produces a biogas, consisting of methane, carbon dioxide, and traces of other 'contaminant' gases.[1] This biogas can be used directly as fuel, in combined heat and power gas engines[9] or upgraded to natural gas-quality biomethane. The nutrient-rich digestate also produced can be used as fertilizer.

With the re-use of waste as a resource and new technological approaches that have lowered capital costs, anaerobic digestion has in recent years received increased attention among governments in a number of countries, among these the United Kingdom (2011),[10] Germany,[citation needed] Denmark (2011),[11] and the United States.[12]

Process edit

Many microorganisms affect anaerobic digestion, including acetic acid-forming bacteria (acetogens) and methane-forming archaea (methanogens). These organisms promote a number of chemical processes in converting the biomass to biogas.[13]

Gaseous oxygen is excluded from the reactions by physical containment. Anaerobes utilize electron acceptors from sources other than oxygen gas. These acceptors can be the organic material itself or may be supplied by inorganic oxides from within the input material. When the oxygen source in an anaerobic system is derived from the organic material itself, the 'intermediate' end products are primarily alcohols, aldehydes, and organic acids, plus carbon dioxide. In the presence of specialised methanogens, the intermediates are converted to the 'final' end products of methane, carbon dioxide, and trace levels of hydrogen sulfide.[14] In an anaerobic system, the majority of the chemical energy contained within the starting material is released by methanogenic archaea as methane.[15]

Populations of anaerobic microorganisms typically take a significant period of time to establish themselves to be fully effective. Therefore, common practice is to introduce anaerobic microorganisms from materials with existing populations, a process known as "seeding" the digesters, typically accomplished with the addition of sewage sludge or cattle slurry.[16]

Process stages edit

The four key stages of anaerobic digestion involve hydrolysis, acidogenesis, acetogenesis and methanogenesis.[17] The overall process can be described by the chemical reaction, where organic material such as glucose is biochemically digested into carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) by the anaerobic microorganisms.

C6H12O6 → 3CO2 + 3CH4

 
Anaerobic Digestion Process Flow: All process flows are dependent on the balance of between proteins, carbs and fats.
  • Hydrolysis

In most cases, biomass is made up of large organic polymers. For the bacteria in anaerobic digesters to access the energy potential of the material, these chains must first be broken down into their smaller constituent parts. These constituent parts, or monomers, such as sugars, are readily available to other bacteria. The process of breaking these chains and dissolving the smaller molecules into solution is called hydrolysis. Therefore, hydrolysis of these high-molecular-weight polymeric components is the necessary first step in anaerobic digestion.[18] Through hydrolysis the complex organic molecules are broken down into simple sugars, amino acids, and fatty acids.

Acetate and hydrogen produced in the first stages can be used directly by methanogens. Other molecules, such as volatile fatty acids (VFAs) with a chain length greater than that of acetate must first be catabolised into compounds that can be directly used by methanogens.[19]

  • Acidogenesis

The biological process of acidogenesis results in further breakdown of the remaining components by acidogenic (fermentative) bacteria. Here, VFAs are created, along with ammonia, carbon dioxide, and hydrogen sulfide, as well as other byproducts.[20] The process of acidogenesis is similar to the way milk sours.

  • Acetogenesis

The third stage of anaerobic digestion is acetogenesis. Here, simple molecules created through the acidogenesis phase are further digested by acetogens to produce largely acetic acid, as well as carbon dioxide and hydrogen.[21]

  • Methanogenesis

The terminal stage of anaerobic digestion is the biological process of methanogenesis. Here, methanogens use the intermediate products of the preceding stages and convert them into methane, carbon dioxide, and water. These components make up the majority of the biogas emitted from the system. Methanogenesis is sensitive to both high and low pHs and occurs between pH 6.5 and pH 8.[22] The remaining, indigestible material the microbes cannot use and any dead bacterial remains constitute the digestate.

[23]

Configuration edit

 
Comparison of common biogas technologies

Anaerobic digesters can be designed and engineered to operate using a number of different configurations and can be categorized into batch vs. continuous process mode, mesophilic vs. thermophilic temperature conditions, high vs. low portion of solids, and single stage vs. multistage processes. Continuous process requires more complex design, but still, it may be more economical than batch process, because batch process requires more initial building money and a larger volume of the digesters (spread across several batches) to handle the same amount of waste as a continuous process digester.[24] Higher heat energy is required in a thermophilic system compared to a mesophilic system, but the thermophilic system requires much less time and has a larger gas output capacity and higher methane gas content, so one has to consider that trade-off carefully.[25] For solids content, low will handle up to 15% solid content. Above this level is considered high solids content and can also be known as dry digestion.[26] In a single stage process, one reactor houses the four anaerobic digestion steps. A multistage process utilizes two or more reactors for digestion to separate the methanogenesis and hydrolysis phases.[27]

Batch or continuous edit

Anaerobic digestion can be performed as a batch process or a continuous process. In a batch system, biomass is added to the reactor at the start of the process. The reactor is then sealed for the duration of the process. In its simplest form batch processing needs inoculation with already processed material to start the anaerobic digestion. In a typical scenario, biogas production will be formed with a normal distribution pattern over time. Operators can use this fact to determine when they believe the process of digestion of the organic matter has completed. There can be severe odour issues if a batch reactor is opened and emptied before the process is well completed. A more advanced type of batch approach has limited the odour issues by integrating anaerobic digestion with in-vessel composting. In this approach inoculation takes place through the use of recirculated degasified percolate. After anaerobic digestion has completed, the biomass is kept in the reactor which is then used for in-vessel composting before it is opened[28] As the batch digestion is simple and requires less equipment and lower levels of design work, it is typically a cheaper form of digestion.[29] Using more than one batch reactor at a plant can ensure constant production of biogas.

In continuous digestion processes, organic matter is constantly added (continuous complete mixed) or added in stages to the reactor (continuous plug flow; first in – first out). Here, the end products are constantly or periodically removed, resulting in constant production of biogas. A single or multiple digesters in sequence may be used. Examples of this form of anaerobic digestion include continuous stirred-tank reactors, upflow anaerobic sludge blankets, expanded granular sludge beds, and internal circulation reactors.[30][31]

Temperature edit

The two conventional operational temperature levels for anaerobic digesters determine the species of methanogens in the digesters:[32]

  • Mesophilic digestion takes place optimally around 30 to 38 °C, or at ambient temperatures between 20 and 45 °C, where mesophiles are the primary microorganisms present.
  • Thermophilic digestion takes place optimally around 49 to 57 °C, or at elevated temperatures up to 70 °C, where thermophiles are the primary microorganisms present.

A limit case has been reached in Bolivia, with anaerobic digestion in temperature working conditions of less than 10 °C. The anaerobic process is very slow, taking more than three times the normal mesophilic time process.[33] In experimental work at University of Alaska Fairbanks, a 1,000-litre digester using psychrophiles harvested from "mud from a frozen lake in Alaska" has produced 200–300 litres of methane per day, about 20 to 30% of the output from digesters in warmer climates.[34] Mesophilic species outnumber thermophiles, and they are also more tolerant to changes in environmental conditions than thermophiles. Mesophilic systems are, therefore, considered to be more stable than thermophilic digestion systems. In contrast, while thermophilic digestion systems are considered less stable, their energy input is higher, with more biogas being removed from the organic matter in an equal amount of time. The increased temperatures facilitate faster reaction rates, and thus faster gas yields. Operation at higher temperatures facilitates greater pathogen reduction of the digestate. In countries where legislation, such as the Animal By-Products Regulations in the European Union, requires digestate to meet certain levels of pathogen reduction there may be a benefit to using thermophilic temperatures instead of mesophilic.[35]

Additional pre-treatment can be used to reduce the necessary retention time to produce biogas. For example, certain processes shred the substrates to increase the surface area or use a thermal pretreatment stage (such as pasteurisation) to significantly enhance the biogas output. The pasteurisation process can also be used to reduce the pathogenic concentration in the digestate, leaving the anaerobic digester. Pasteurisation may be achieved by heat treatment combined with maceration of the solids.

Solids content edit

In a typical scenario, three different operational parameters are associated with the solids content of the feedstock to the digesters:

  • High solids (dry—stackable substrate)
  • High solids (wet—pumpable substrate)
  • Low solids (wet—pumpable substrate)
 
Design of a dry/solid-state anaerobic digestion (AD) biogas plant

High solids (dry) digesters are designed to process materials with a solids content between 25 and 40%. Unlike wet digesters that process pumpable slurries, high solids (dry – stackable substrate) digesters are designed to process solid substrates without the addition of water. The primary styles of dry digesters are continuous vertical plug flow and batch tunnel horizontal digesters. Continuous vertical plug flow digesters are upright, cylindrical tanks where feedstock is continuously fed into the top of the digester, and flows downward by gravity during digestion. In batch tunnel digesters, the feedstock is deposited in tunnel-like chambers with a gas-tight door. Neither approach has mixing inside the digester. The amount of pretreatment, such as contaminant removal, depends both upon the nature of the waste streams being processed and the desired quality of the digestate. Size reduction (grinding) is beneficial in continuous vertical systems, as it accelerates digestion, while batch systems avoid grinding and instead require structure (e.g. yard waste) to reduce compaction of the stacked pile. Continuous vertical dry digesters have a smaller footprint due to the shorter effective retention time and vertical design. Wet digesters can be designed to operate in either a high-solids content, with a total suspended solids (TSS) concentration greater than ~20%, or a low-solids concentration less than ~15%.[36][37]

High solids (wet) digesters process a thick slurry that requires more energy input to move and process the feedstock. The thickness of the material may also lead to associated problems with abrasion. High solids digesters will typically have a lower land requirement due to the lower volumes associated with the moisture.[38] High solids digesters also require correction of conventional performance calculations (e.g. gas production, retention time, kinetics, etc.) originally based on very dilute sewage digestion concepts, since larger fractions of the feedstock mass are potentially convertible to biogas.[39]

Low solids (wet) digesters can transport material through the system using standard pumps that require significantly lower energy input. Low solids digesters require a larger amount of land than high solids due to the increased volumes associated with the increased liquid-to-feedstock ratio of the digesters. There are benefits associated with operation in a liquid environment, as it enables more thorough circulation of materials and contact between the bacteria and their food. This enables the bacteria to more readily access the substances on which they are feeding, and increases the rate of gas production.[40]

Complexity edit

Digestion systems can be configured with different levels of complexity.[36] In a single-stage digestion system (one-stage), all of the biological reactions occur within a single, sealed reactor or holding tank. Using a single stage reduces construction costs, but results in less control of the reactions occurring within the system. Acidogenic bacteria, through the production of acids, reduce the pH of the tank. Methanogenic archaea, as outlined earlier, operate in a strictly defined pH range.[41] Therefore, the biological reactions of the different species in a single-stage reactor can be in direct competition with each other. Another one-stage reaction system is an anaerobic lagoon. These lagoons are pond-like, earthen basins used for the treatment and long-term storage of manures.[42] Here the anaerobic reactions are contained within the natural anaerobic sludge contained in the pool.

In a two-stage digestion system (multistage), different digestion vessels are optimised to bring maximum control over the bacterial communities living within the digesters. Acidogenic bacteria produce organic acids and more quickly grow and reproduce than methanogenic archaea. Methanogenic archaea require stable pH and temperature to optimise their performance.[43]

Under typical circumstances, hydrolysis, acetogenesis, and acidogenesis occur within the first reaction vessel. The organic material is then heated to the required operational temperature (either mesophilic or thermophilic) prior to being pumped into a methanogenic reactor. The initial hydrolysis or acidogenesis tanks prior to the methanogenic reactor can provide a buffer to the rate at which feedstock is added. Some European countries require a degree of elevated heat treatment to kill harmful bacteria in the input waste.[44] In this instance, there may be a pasteurisation or sterilisation stage prior to digestion or between the two digestion tanks. Notably, it is not possible to completely isolate the different reaction phases, and often some biogas is produced in the hydrolysis or acidogenesis tanks.

Residence time edit

The residence time in a digester varies with the amount and type of feed material, and with the configuration of the digestion system. In a typical two-stage mesophilic digestion, residence time varies between 15 and 40 days,[45] while for a single-stage thermophilic digestion, residence times is normally faster and takes around 14 days. The plug-flow nature of some of these systems will mean the full degradation of the material may not have been realised in this timescale. In this event, digestate exiting the system will be darker in colour and will typically have more odour.[46]

In the case of an upflow anaerobic sludge blanket digestion (UASB), hydraulic residence times can be as short as 1 hour to 1 day, and solid retention times can be up to 90 days. In this manner, a UASB system is able to separate solids and hydraulic retention times with the use of a sludge blanket.[47] Continuous digesters have mechanical or hydraulic devices, depending on the level of solids in the material, to mix the contents, enabling the bacteria and the food to be in contact. They also allow excess material to be continuously extracted to maintain a reasonably constant volume within the digestion tanks.[48]

Pressure edit

A recent development in anaerobic reactor design is High-pressure anaerobic digestion (HPAD) also referred to a Autogenerative High Pressure Digestion (AHPD). This technique produces a biogas with a elevated methane content. The produced carbon dioxide in biogas dissolves more into the water phase under pressure then methane does. Hence the produced biogas is richer in methane. Research at the University of Groningen demonstrated that the bacterial community changes in composition under the influence of pressure.[49] Individual bacteria species have their optimum circumstances in which they grow and replicate the fastest. Commonly known are pH, temperature, salinity etc. but pressure is also one of them. Some pieces have adapted to life in the deep oceans where pressure is much higher then at sea level. This makes it possible in the similar vain as other process parameters such as Temperature, Retention Time, pH to influence the anaerobic digestion process.

Inhibition edit

 
 
Left: Farm-based maize silage digester located near Neumünster in Germany, 2007 - the green, inflatable biogas holder is shown on top of the digester. Right: Two-stage, low solids, UASB digestion component of a mechanical biological treatment system near Tel Aviv; the process water is seen in balance tank and sequencing batch reactor, 2005.

The anaerobic digestion process can be inhibited by several compounds, affecting one or more of the bacterial groups responsible for the different organic matter degradation steps. The degree of the inhibition depends, among other factors, on the concentration of the inhibitor in the digester. Potential inhibitors are ammonia,[50] sulfide, light metal ions (Na, K, Mg, Ca, Al), heavy metals, some organics (chlorophenols, halogenated aliphatics, N-substituted aromatics, long chain fatty acids), etc.[51]

Total ammonia nitrogen (TAN) has been shown to inhibit production of methane. Furthermore, it destabilises the microbial community, impacting the synthesis of acetic acid. Acetic acid is one of the driving forces in methane production. At an excess of 5000 mg/L TAN, pH adjustment is needed to keep the reaction stable.[52] A TAN concentration above 1700– 1800 mg/L inhibits methane production and yield decreases at greater TAN concentrations. High TAN concentrations cause the reaction to turn acidic and lead to a domino effect of inhibition.[52] Total ammonia nitrogen is the combination of free ammonia and ionized ammonia. TAN is produced through degrading material high in nitrogen, typically proteins and will naturally build in anaerobic digestion. This is depending on the organic feed stock fed to the system. In typical wastewater treatment practices, TAN reduction is done with via nitrification. Nitrification is an aerobic process where TAN is consumed by aerobic heterotrophic bacteria. These bacteria release nitrate and nitrite which are later converted to nitrogen gas through the denitrification process.[53] Hydrolysis and acidogenesis can also be impacted by TAN concentration. In mesophilic conditions, inhibition for hydrolysis was found to occur at 5500 mg/L TAN, while acidogenesis inhibition occurs at 6500 mg/L TAN.[54]

Feedstocks edit

 
Anaerobic lagoon and generators at the Cal Poly Dairy, United States

The most important initial issue when considering the application of anaerobic digestion systems is the feedstock to the process.[55] Almost any organic material can be processed with anaerobic digestion;[56] however, if biogas production is the aim, the level of putrescibility is the key factor in its successful application.[57] The more putrescible (digestible) the material, the higher the gas yields possible from the system.

Feedstocks can include biodegradable waste materials, such as waste paper, grass clippings, leftover food, sewage, and animal waste.[1] Woody wastes are the exception, because they are largely unaffected by digestion, as most anaerobes are unable to degrade lignin. Xylophagous anaerobes (lignin consumers) or high temperature pretreatment, such as pyrolysis, can be used to break lignin down. Anaerobic digesters can also be fed with specially grown energy crops, such as silage, for dedicated biogas production. In Germany and continental Europe, these facilities are referred to as "biogas" plants. A codigestion or cofermentation plant is typically an agricultural anaerobic digester that accepts two or more input materials for simultaneous digestion.[58]

The length of time required for anaerobic digestion depends on the chemical complexity of the material. Material rich in easily digestible sugars breaks down quickly, whereas intact lignocellulosic material rich in cellulose and hemicellulose polymers can take much longer to break down.[59] Anaerobic microorganisms are generally unable to break down lignin, the recalcitrant aromatic component of biomass.[60]

Anaerobic digesters were originally designed for operation using sewage sludge and manures. Sewage and manure are not, however, the material with the most potential for anaerobic digestion, as the biodegradable material has already had much of the energy content taken out by the animals that produced it. Therefore, many digesters operate with codigestion of two or more types of feedstock. For example, in a farm-based digester that uses dairy manure as the primary feedstock,[61] the gas production may be significantly increased by adding a second feedstock, e.g., grass and corn (typical on-farm feedstock), or various organic byproducts, such as slaughterhouse waste, fats, oils and grease from restaurants, organic household waste, etc. (typical off-site feedstock).[62]

Digesters processing dedicated energy crops can achieve high levels of degradation and biogas production.[37][63][64] Slurry-only systems are generally cheaper, but generate far less energy than those using crops, such as maize and grass silage; by using a modest amount of crop material (30%), an anaerobic digestion plant can increase energy output tenfold for only three times the capital cost, relative to a slurry-only system.[65]

Moisture content edit

A second consideration related to the feedstock is moisture content. Drier, stackable substrates, such as food and yard waste, are suitable for digestion in tunnel-like chambers. Tunnel-style systems typically have near-zero wastewater discharge, as well, so this style of system has advantages where the discharge of digester liquids are a liability. The wetter the material, the more suitable it will be to handling with standard pumps instead of energy-intensive concrete pumps and physical means of movement. Also, the wetter the material, the more volume and area it takes up relative to the levels of gas produced. The moisture content of the target feedstock will also affect what type of system is applied to its treatment. To use a high-solids anaerobic digester for dilute feedstocks, bulking agents, such as compost, should be applied to increase the solids content of the input material.[66] Another key consideration is the carbon:nitrogen ratio of the input material. This ratio is the balance of food a microbe requires to grow; the optimal C:N ratio is 20–30:1.[67] Excess N can lead to ammonia inhibition of digestion.[63]

Contamination edit

The level of contamination of the feedstock material is a key consideration when using wet digestion or plug-flow digestion.

If the feedstock to the digesters has significant levels of physical contaminants, such as plastic, glass, or metals, then processing to remove the contaminants will be required for the material to be used.[68] If it is not removed, then the digesters can be blocked and will not function efficiently. This contamination issue does not occur with dry digestion or solid-state anaerobic digestion (SSAD) plants, since SSAD handles dry, stackable biomass with a high percentage of solids (40-60%) in gas-tight chambers called fermenter boxes.[69] It is with this understanding that mechanical biological treatment plants are designed. The higher the level of pretreatment a feedstock requires, the more processing machinery will be required, and, hence, the project will have higher capital costs. National Non-Food Crops Centre.[70]

After sorting or screening to remove any physical contaminants from the feedstock, the material is often shredded, minced, and mechanically or hydraulically pulped to increase the surface area available to microbes in the digesters and, hence, increase the speed of digestion. The maceration of solids can be achieved by using a chopper pump to transfer the feedstock material into the airtight digester, where anaerobic treatment takes place.

Substrate composition edit

Substrate composition is a major factor in determining the methane yield and methane production rates from the digestion of biomass. Techniques to determine the compositional characteristics of the feedstock are available, while parameters such as solids, elemental, and organic analyses are important for digester design and operation.[71] Methane yield can be estimated from the elemental composition of substrate along with an estimate of its degradability (the fraction of the substrate that is converted to biogas in a reactor).[72] In order to predict biogas composition (the relative fractions of methane and carbon dioxide) it is necessary to estimate carbon dioxide partitioning between the aqueous and gas phases, which requires additional information (reactor temperature, pH, and substrate composition) and a chemical speciation model.[73] Direct measurements of biomethanation potential are also made using gas evolution or more recent gravimetric assays.[74]

Applications edit

 
Schematic of an anaerobic digester as part of a sanitation system. It produces a digested slurry (digestate) that can be used as a fertilizer, and biogas that can be used for energy.[75]

Using anaerobic digestion technologies can help to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases in a number of key ways:

  • Replacement of fossil fuels
  • Reducing or eliminating the energy footprint of waste treatment plants
  • Reducing methane emission from landfills
  • Displacing industrially produced chemical fertilizers
  • Reducing vehicle movements
  • Reducing electrical grid transportation losses
  • Reducing usage of LP Gas for cooking
  • An important component of the Zero Waste initiatives.[76]

Waste and wastewater treatment edit

Anaerobic digesters in a sewage treatment plant. The methane gas is managed by burning through a gas flare.

Anaerobic digestion is particularly suited to organic material, and is commonly used for industrial effluent, wastewater and sewage sludge treatment.[77] Anaerobic digestion, a simple process, can greatly reduce the amount of organic matter which might otherwise be destined to be dumped at sea,[78] dumped in landfills, or burnt in incinerators.[79]

Pressure from environmentally related legislation on solid waste disposal methods in developed countries has increased the application of anaerobic digestion as a process for reducing waste volumes and generating useful byproducts. It may either be used to process the source-separated fraction of municipal waste or alternatively combined with mechanical sorting systems, to process residual mixed municipal waste. These facilities are called mechanical biological treatment plants.[80][81][82]

If the putrescible waste processed in anaerobic digesters were disposed of in a landfill, it would break down naturally and often anaerobically. In this case, the gas will eventually escape into the atmosphere. As methane is about 20 times more potent as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, this has significant negative environmental effects.[83]

In countries that collect household waste, the use of local anaerobic digestion facilities can help to reduce the amount of waste that requires transportation to centralized landfill sites or incineration facilities. This reduced burden on transportation reduces carbon emissions from the collection vehicles. If localized anaerobic digestion facilities are embedded within an electrical distribution network, they can help reduce the electrical losses associated with transporting electricity over a national grid.[84]

Power generation edit

In developing countries, simple home and farm-based anaerobic digestion systems offer the potential for low-cost energy for cooking and lighting.[33][85][86][87] From 1975, China and India have both had large, government-backed schemes for adaptation of small biogas plants for use in the household for cooking and lighting. At present, projects for anaerobic digestion in the developing world can gain financial support through the United Nations Clean Development Mechanism if they are able to show they provide reduced carbon emissions.[88]

Methane and power produced in anaerobic digestion facilities can be used to replace energy derived from fossil fuels, and hence reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, because the carbon in biodegradable material is part of a carbon cycle. The carbon released into the atmosphere from the combustion of biogas has been removed by plants for them to grow in the recent past, usually within the last decade, but more typically within the last growing season. If the plants are regrown, taking the carbon out of the atmosphere once more, the system will be carbon neutral.[89][90] In contrast, carbon in fossil fuels has been sequestered in the earth for many millions of years, the combustion of which increases the overall levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Power generation through anaerobic digestors is best suited to large-scale operations, rather than small farms, as large operations have the volume of manure that is able to make the systems financially viable.[91]

Biogas from sewage sludge treatment is sometimes used to run a gas engine to produce electrical power, some or all of which can be used to run the sewage works.[92] Some waste heat from the engine is then used to heat the digester. The waste heat is, in general, enough to heat the digester to the required temperatures. The power potential from sewage works is limited – in the UK, there are about 80 MW total of such generation, with the potential to increase to 150 MW, which is insignificant compared to the average power demand in the UK of about 35,000 MW. The scope for biogas generation from nonsewage waste biological matter – energy crops, food waste, abattoir waste, etc. - is much higher, estimated to be capable of about 3,000 MW.[93] Farm biogas plants using animal waste and energy crops are expected to contribute to reducing CO2 emissions and strengthen the grid, while providing UK farmers with additional revenues.[94]

Some countries offer incentives in the form of, for example, feed-in tariffs for feeding electricity onto the power grid to subsidize green energy production.[1][95]

In Oakland, California at the East Bay Municipal Utility District's main wastewater treatment plant (EBMUD), food waste is currently codigested with primary and secondary municipal wastewater solids and other high-strength wastes. Compared to municipal wastewater solids digestion alone, food waste codigestion has many benefits. Anaerobic digestion of food waste pulp from the EBMUD food waste process provides a higher normalized energy benefit, compared to municipal wastewater solids: 730 to 1,300 kWh per dry ton of food waste applied compared to 560 to 940 kWh per dry ton of municipal wastewater solids applied.[96][97]

Grid injection edit

Biogas grid-injection is the injection of biogas into the natural gas grid.[98] The raw biogas has to be previously upgraded to biomethane. This upgrading implies the removal of contaminants such as hydrogen sulphide or siloxanes, as well as the carbon dioxide. Several technologies are available for this purpose, the most widely implemented being pressure swing adsorption (PSA), water or amine scrubbing (absorption processes) and, in recent years, membrane separation.[99] As an alternative, the electricity and the heat can be used for on-site generation,[100] resulting in a reduction of losses in the transportation of energy. Typical energy losses in natural gas transmission systems range from 1–2%, whereas the current energy losses on a large electrical system range from 5–8%.[101]

In October 2010, Didcot Sewage Works became the first in the UK to produce biomethane gas supplied to the national grid, for use in up to 200 homes in Oxfordshire.[102] By 2017, UK electricity firm Ecotricity plan to have digester fed by locally sourced grass[103] fueling 6000 homes[104]

Vehicle fuel edit

After upgrading with the above-mentioned technologies, the biogas (transformed into biomethane) can be used as vehicle fuel in adapted vehicles. This use is very extensive in Sweden, where over 38,600 gas vehicles exist, and 60% of the vehicle gas is biomethane generated in anaerobic digestion plants.[105]

Fertiliser and soil conditioner edit

The solid, fibrous component of the digested material can be used as a soil conditioner to increase the organic content of soils. Digester liquor can be used as a fertiliser to supply vital nutrients to soils instead of chemical fertilisers that require large amounts of energy to produce and transport. The use of manufactured fertilisers is, therefore, more carbon-intensive than the use of anaerobic digester liquor fertiliser. In countries such as Spain, where many soils are organically depleted, the markets for the digested solids can be equally as important as the biogas.[106]

Cooking gas edit

By using a bio-digester, which produces the bacteria required for decomposing, cooking gas is generated. The organic waste like fallen leaves, kitchen waste, food waste etc. are fed into a crusher unit, where it is mixed with a small amount of water. The mixture is then fed into the bio-digester, where the archaea decomposes it to produce cooking gas. This gas is piped to kitchen stove. A 2 cubic meter bio-digester can produce 2 cubic meters of cooking gas. This is equivalent to 1 kg of LPG. The notable advantage of using a bio-digester is the sludge which is a rich organic manure.[107]

Products edit

The three principal products of anaerobic digestion are biogas, digestate, and water.[36][108][109]

Biogas edit

Typical composition of biogas
Compound Formula %
Methane CH
4
50–75
Carbon dioxide CO
2
25–50
Nitrogen N
2
0–10
Hydrogen H
2
0–1
Hydrogen sulfide H
2
S
0–3
Oxygen O
2
0–0
Source: www.kolumbus.fi, 2007[110]
 
Biogas holder with lightning protection rods and backup gas flare
 
Biogas carrying pipes

Biogas is the ultimate waste product of the bacteria feeding off the input biodegradable feedstock[111] (the methanogenesis stage of anaerobic digestion is performed by archaea, a micro-organism on a distinctly different branch of the phylogenetic tree of life to bacteria), and is mostly methane and carbon dioxide,[112][113] with a small amount hydrogen and trace hydrogen sulfide. (As-produced, biogas also contains water vapor, with the fractional water vapor volume a function of biogas temperature).[39] Most of the biogas is produced during the middle of the digestion, after the bacterial population has grown, and tapers off as the putrescible material is exhausted.[114] The gas is normally stored on top of the digester in an inflatable gas bubble or extracted and stored next to the facility in a gas holder.

The methane in biogas can be burned to produce both heat and electricity, usually with a reciprocating engine or microturbine[115][unreliable source?] often in a cogeneration arrangement where the electricity and waste heat generated are used to warm the digesters or to heat buildings. Excess electricity can be sold to suppliers or put into the local grid. Electricity produced by anaerobic digesters is considered to be renewable energy and may attract subsidies.[116] Biogas does not contribute to increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations because the gas is not released directly into the atmosphere and the carbon dioxide comes from an organic source with a short carbon cycle.

Biogas may require treatment or 'scrubbing' to refine it for use as a fuel.[117] Hydrogen sulfide, a toxic product formed from sulfates in the feedstock, is released as a trace component of the biogas. National environmental enforcement agencies, such as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency or the English and Welsh Environment Agency, put strict limits on the levels of gases containing hydrogen sulfide, and, if the levels of hydrogen sulfide in the gas are high, gas scrubbing and cleaning equipment (such as amine gas treating) will be needed to process the biogas to within regionally accepted levels.[118] Alternatively, the addition of ferrous chloride FeCl2 to the digestion tanks inhibits hydrogen sulfide production.[119]

Volatile siloxanes can also contaminate the biogas; such compounds are frequently found in household waste and wastewater. In digestion facilities accepting these materials as a component of the feedstock, low-molecular-weight siloxanes volatilise into biogas. When this gas is combusted in a gas engine, turbine, or boiler, siloxanes are converted into silicon dioxide (SiO2), which deposits internally in the machine, increasing wear and tear.[120][121] Practical and cost-effective technologies to remove siloxanes and other biogas contaminants are available at the present time.[122] In certain applications, in situ treatment can be used to increase the methane purity by reducing the offgas carbon dioxide content, purging the majority of it in a secondary reactor.[123]

In countries such as Switzerland, Germany, and Sweden, the methane in the biogas may be compressed for it to be used as a vehicle transportation fuel or input directly into the gas mains.[124] In countries where the driver for the use of anaerobic digestion are renewable electricity subsidies, this route of treatment is less likely, as energy is required in this processing stage and reduces the overall levels available to sell.[125]

Digestate edit

Digestate is the solid remnants of the original input material to the digesters that the microbes cannot use. It also consists of the mineralised remains of the dead bacteria from within the digesters. Digestate can come in three forms: fibrous, liquor, or a sludge-based combination of the two fractions. In two-stage systems, different forms of digestate come from different digestion tanks. In single-stage digestion systems, the two fractions will be combined and, if desired, separated by further processing.[126][127]

 
Acidogenic anaerobic digestate

The second byproduct (acidogenic digestate) is a stable, organic material consisting largely of lignin and cellulose, but also of a variety of mineral components in a matrix of dead bacterial cells; some plastic may be present. The material resembles domestic compost and can be used as such or to make low-grade building products, such as fibreboard.[128][129] The solid digestate can also be used as feedstock for ethanol production.[130]

The third byproduct is a liquid (methanogenic digestate) rich in nutrients, which can be used as a fertiliser, depending on the quality of the material being digested.[127] Levels of potentially toxic elements (PTEs) should be chemically assessed. This will depend upon the quality of the original feedstock. In the case of most clean and source-separated biodegradable waste streams, the levels of PTEs will be low. In the case of wastes originating from industry, the levels of PTEs may be higher and will need to be taken into consideration when determining a suitable end use for the material.

Digestate typically contains elements, such as lignin, that cannot be broken down by the anaerobic microorganisms. Also, the digestate may contain ammonia that is phytotoxic, and may hamper the growth of plants if it is used as a soil-improving material. For these two reasons, a maturation or composting stage may be employed after digestion. Lignin and other materials are available for degradation by aerobic microorganisms, such as fungi, helping reduce the overall volume of the material for transport. During this maturation, the ammonia will be oxidized into nitrates, improving the fertility of the material and making it more suitable as a soil improver. Large composting stages are typically used by dry anaerobic digestion technologies.[131][132]

Wastewater edit

The final output from anaerobic digestion systems is water, which originates both from the moisture content of the original waste that was treated and water produced during the microbial reactions in the digestion systems. This water may be released from the dewatering of the digestate or may be implicitly separate from the digestate.

The wastewater exiting the anaerobic digestion facility will typically have elevated levels of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and chemical oxygen demand (COD). These measures of the reactivity of the effluent indicate an ability to pollute. Some of this material is termed 'hard COD', meaning it cannot be accessed by the anaerobic bacteria for conversion into biogas. If this effluent were put directly into watercourses, it would negatively affect them by causing eutrophication. As such, further treatment of the wastewater is often required. This treatment will typically be an oxidation stage wherein air is passed through the water in a sequencing batch reactors or reverse osmosis unit.[133][134][135]

History edit

 
Gas street lamp

The history of anaerobic digestion is a long one, beginning as early as tenth century BCE in Assyria where biogas was used to heat bath water.[136][137] Reported scientific interest in the manufacturing of gas produced by the natural decomposition of organic matter dates from the 17th century, when Robert Boyle (1627-1691) and Stephen Hales (1677-1761) noted that disturbing the sediment of streams and lakes released flammable gas.[15] In 1778, the Italian physicist Alessandro Volta (1745-1827), the father of electrochemistry,[138] scientifically identified that gas as methane.[139]

In 1808 Sir Humphry Davy proved the presence of methane in the gases produced by cattle manure.[17] The first known anaerobic digester was built in 1859 at a leper colony in Bombay in India.[140] In 1895, the technology was developed in Exeter, England, where a septic tank was used to generate gas for the sewer gas destructor lamp, a type of gas lighting. Also in England, in 1904, the first dual-purpose tank for both sedimentation and sludge treatment was installed in Hampton, London.

 
Imhoff tank

By the early 20th century, anaerobic digestion systems began to resemble the technology as it appears today.[137] In 1906, Karl Imhoff created the Imhoff tank;[141] an early form of anaerobic digester and model wastewater treatment system throughout the early 20th century.[142][143] After 1920, closed tank systems began to replace the previously common use of anaerobic lagoons – covered earthen basins used to treat volatile solids. Research on anaerobic digestion began in earnest in the 1930s.[144]

Around the time of World War I, production from biofuels slowed as petroleum production increased and its uses were identified.[145] While fuel shortages during World War II re-popularized anaerobic digestion, interest in the technology decreased again after the war ended.[137][146] Similarly, the 1970s energy crisis sparked interest in anaerobic digestion.[137] In addition to high energy prices, factors affecting the adoption of anaerobic digestion systems include receptivity to innovation, pollution penalties, policy incentives, and the availability of subsidies and funding opportunities.[147][148]

Modern geographical distribution edit

Today, anaerobic digesters are commonly found alongside farms to reduce nitrogen run-off from manure, or wastewater treatment facilities to reduce the costs of sludge disposal.[137] Agricultural anaerobic digestion for energy production has become most popular in Germany, where there were 8,625 digesters in 2014.[136] In the United Kingdom, there were 259 facilities by 2014, and 500 projects planned to become operational by 2019.[149] In the United States, there were 191 operational plants across 34 states in 2012.[148] Policy may explain why adoption rates are so different across these countries.

Feed-in tariffs in Germany were enacted in 1991, also known as FIT, providing long-term contracts compensating investments in renewable energy generation. Consequently, between 1991 and 1998 the number of anaerobic digester plants in Germany grew from 20 to 517. In the late 1990s, energy prices in Germany varied and investors became unsure of the market's potential. The German government responded by amending FIT four times between 2000 and 2011, increasing tariffs and improving the profitability of anaerobic digestion, and resulting in reliable returns for biogas production and continued high adoption rates across the country.[148][136]

Incidents involving digesters edit

Anaerobic digesters have caused Fish kills (e.g. River Mole, Devon,[150] River Teifi,[151] Afon Llynfi,[152] and loss of human life (e.g. Avonmouth explosion)

There have been explosions of ADs in the US[153] (Jay, Maine Pixelle Specialty Solutions' Androscoggin Mill;[154] Pensacola (Cantonment) 22 January 2017 (Kamyr digester explosion);[155] EPDM failure March 2013 Aumsville, Oregon;[156] February 6, 1987, Pennsylvania two workers at a wastewater treatment plant were re-draining a sewage digester when an explosion lifted the 30-ton floating cover, killing both workers instantly;[157] Southwest Wastewater Treatment Plant in Springfield, Missouri),[158] in the UK (for example at Avonmouth and at Harper Adams College, Newport, Shropshire[159][160]), plus In Europe, there were about 800 accidents on biogas plants between 2005 and 2015, e.g. in France (Saint-Fargeau)[161][162] (though few of them were 'serious' with direct consequences for the human population).[163][164] Fortunately, according to one source, 'less than a dozen of them had consequences on humans'- for example, the incident at Rhadereistedt, Germany (4 dead).[161][165]

Safety analyses have included[166][167][168] a 2016 study compiled a database of 169 accidents involving ADs.[169][163]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Anaerobic Digestion". NNFCC Renewable Fuels and Energy Factsheet. National Non-Food Crops Centre. Retrieved 22 November 2011.
  2. ^ Koyama, Tadashiro (1963). "Gaseous metabolism in lake sediments and paddy soils and the production of atmospheric methane and hydrogen". Journal of Geophysical Research. 68 (13): 3971–3973. Bibcode:1963JGR....68.3971K. doi:10.1029/JZ068i013p03971.
  3. ^ Pamatmat, Mario Macalalag; Bhagwat, Ashok M. (1973). (PDF). Limnology and Oceanography. 18 (4): 611–627. Bibcode:1973LimOc..18..611P. doi:10.4319/lo.1973.18.4.0611. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 December 2013.
  4. ^ Zehnder, Alexander J. B. (1978). "Ecology of methane formation". In Mitchell, Ralph (ed.). Water Pollution Microbiology. Vol. 2. New York: Wiley. pp. 349–376. ISBN 978-0-471-01902-2.
  5. ^ MacGregor, A. N.; Keeney, D.R. (1973). "Methane formation by lake sediments during in vitro incubations". Journal of the American Water Resources Association. 9 (6): 1153–1158. Bibcode:1973JAWRA...9.1153M. doi:10.1111/j.1752-1688.1973.tb05854.x.
  6. ^ (PDF). waste.nl. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 25 October 2007.
  7. ^ Tabatabaei, Meisam (2010). "Importance of the methanogenic archaea populations in anaerobic wastewater treatments" (PDF). Process Biochemistry. 45 (8): 1214–1225. doi:10.1016/j.procbio.2010.05.017.
  8. ^ "Agricultural Biogas". clarke-energy.com. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  9. ^ "Jenbacher Gas Engines". clarke-energy.com.
  10. ^ "Anaerobic Digestion Strategy and Action Plan" (PDF). defra.gov.uk. Retrieved 19 January 2012.
  11. ^ "Jyllands-Posten". 29 December 2011. Retrieved 19 January 2012 – via Google Translate.
  12. ^ "AgSTAR Data and Trends". United States Environmental Protection Agency. 3 July 2019. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
  13. ^ (Report). National Non-Food Crops Centre. NNFCC 09-012. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011.
  14. ^ Adapted from Beychok, M. (1967). Aqueous Wastes from Petroleum and Petrochemical Plants (First ed.). John Wiley & Sons. LCCN 67019834.
  15. ^ a b Fergusen, T. & Mah, R. (2006) Methanogenic bacteria in Anaerobic digestion of biomass, p49
  16. ^ . unu.edu. Archived from the original on 2 December 2010. Retrieved 5 November 2007.
  17. ^ a b Anaerobic digestion 5 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine, waste.nl. Retrieved 19.08.07.
  18. ^ Sleat, R.; Mah, R. (2006). "Hydrolytic Bacteria". Anaerobic digestion of biomass. p. 15.
  19. ^ Boone, D.; Mah, R. (2006). Transitional bacteria in anaerobic digestion of biomass. p. 35.
  20. ^ "What is anaerobic digestion?" (PDF). sop.inria.fr. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
  21. ^ . biotank.co.uk. Archived from the original on 12 October 2007. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
  22. ^ . greenthefuture.com. Anaerobic Digester. Archived from the original on 11 October 2016. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  23. ^ "Landfill Gas & Biogas Analyzers | Nova Gas". Nova Gas. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  24. ^ A, Igoni Hilkia; Abowei, M. F. N.; Ayotamuno, M. J.; Eze, C. L. (16 January 2009). "Comparative Evaluation of Batch and Continuous Anaerobic Digesters in Biogas Production from Municipal Solid Waste using Mathematical Models". Agricultural Engineering International: CIGR Journal. ISSN 1682-1130.
  25. ^ "COMPARING OF MESOPHILIC AND THERMOPHILIC ANAEROBIC FERMENTED SEWAGE SLUDGE BASED ON CHEMICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL TESTS" (PDF). aloki.hu. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  26. ^ "Low and High Solid Anaerobic Digestion Technology". www.theecoambassador.com. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  27. ^ "Anaerobic Digestion Systems". www.wtert.eu. 2008. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  28. ^ aikantechnology.com 6 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 10. Feb. 2012.
  29. ^ Anaerobic digestion 13 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine, energy.ca.gov. Retrieved 18.06.09.
  30. ^ BIOPAQ IC, paques.nl. Retrieved 19.08.07.
  31. ^ Biological processes with Biomar technology 27 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine envirochemie.com. Retrieved 24.10.2012.
  32. ^ Song, Y.C.; Kwon, S.J.; Woo, J.H. (April 2004). "Mesophilic and thermophilic temperature co-phase anaerobic digestion compared with single-stage mesophilic- and thermophilic digestion of sewage sludge". Water Res. 38 (7): 1653–62. Bibcode:2004WatRe..38.1653S. doi:10.1016/j.watres.2003.12.019. PMID 15026219.
  33. ^ a b Transfer of low-cost plastic biodigester technology at household level in Bolivia, lrrd.org
  34. ^ Gupta, Sujata (6 November 2010). "Biogas comes in from the cold". New Scientist. London: Sunita Harrington. p. 14. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
  35. ^ Animal by-products introduction, ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 24.10.07.
  36. ^ a b c Feasibility study concerning anaerobic digestion in Northern Ireland, eunomia.co.uk, Retrieved 19.08.07. 28 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ a b Jewell, W.; Cummings, R.; Richards, B. (1993). "Methane fermentation of energy crops: Maximum conversion kinetics and in situ biogas purification". Biomass and Bioenergy. 5 (3–4): 261–278. Bibcode:1993BmBe....5..261J. doi:10.1016/0961-9534(93)90076-G.
  38. ^ "Anaerobic Digestion Plant Design". 13 November 2014. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
  39. ^ a b Richards, B.; Cummings, R.; White, T.; Jewell, W. (1991). "Methods for kinetic analysis of methane fermentation in high solids biomass digesters". Biomass and Bioenergy. 1 (2): 65–73. Bibcode:1991BmBe....1...65R. doi:10.1016/0961-9534(91)90028-B. hdl:1813/60787.
  40. ^ Lorenzo, Jose M.; Munekata, Paulo E.; Dominguez, Ruben; Pateiro, Mirian; Saraiva, Jorge A.; Franco, Daniel (2018). "Main Groups of Microorganisms of Relevance for Food Safety and Stability". Innovative Technologies for Food Preservation: 53–107. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-811031-7.00003-0. ISBN 978-0-12-811031-7. PMC 7150063.
  41. ^ Biomethanation in advances in biochemical engineering and biotechnology, books.google.com. Retrieved 24.10.07.
  42. ^ Anaerobic Lagoons for Storage/Treatment of Livestock Manure 16 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine, missouri.edu. Retrieved 8.11.07.
  43. ^ Griffin, ME; McMahon, KD; Mackie, RI; Raskin, L (1998). "Methanogenic population dynamics during start-up of anaerobic digesters treating municipal solid waste and biosolids". Biotechnol Bioeng. 57 (3): 342–55. doi:10.1002/(sici)1097-0290(19980205)57:3<342::aid-bit11>3.0.co;2-i. PMID 10099211.
  44. ^ Animal By-Products Regulations, defra.gov.uk. Retrieved 24.10.07. 16 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ HIMET—A Two-Stage Anaerobic Digestion Process for Converting Waste to Energy 24 February 2003 at the Wayback Machine, gastechnology.org. Retrieved 19.08.07.
  46. ^ Jurtshuk, Peter (1996), Baron, Samuel (ed.), "Bacterial Metabolism", Medical Microbiology (4th ed.), Galveston (TX): University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, ISBN 978-0-9631172-1-2, PMID 21413278, retrieved 21 October 2023
  47. ^ Finstein, M. S. (2006) ArrowBio process integrates preprocessing and advanced anaerobic digestion to recover recyclables and generate electricity 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine, oaktech-environmental.com. Retrieved 19.08.07.
  48. ^ Biomass conversion: the interface of biotechnology, chemistry and materials science. Berlin: Springer. 2012. p. 115. ISBN 978-3-642-28418-2.
  49. ^ Zhao J, Li Y, Zhang Z (February 2023). "Hydraulic retention time and pressure affect anaerobic digestion process treating synthetic glucose wastewater" (PDF). Bioresource Technology. 370 128531. Bibcode:2023BiTec.37028531Z. doi:10.1016/j.biortech.2022.128531. PMID 36574891. S2CID 255118892.
  50. ^ N. Eldem, Ö. Akgiray, İ. Öztürk, E. Soyer, B. Çallı (2004). "Ammonia and pH inhibition in anaerobic treatment of wastewaters, Part II: Model development." J. Environ. Sci. Health, Part A. Vol.A39, No.9. https://doi.org/10.1081/ESE-200026303
  51. ^ Chen, Ye; Cheng, Jay J.; Creamer, Kurt S. (2008). "Inhibition of anaerobic digestion process: A review". Bioresource Technology. 99 (10): 4044–4064. Bibcode:2008BiTec..99.4044C. doi:10.1016/j.biortech.2007.01.057. PMID 17399981.
  52. ^ a b Yenigün, O., & Demirel, B. (2013). Ammonia inhibition in anaerobic digestion: a review. Process Biochemistry, 48(5-6), 901-911.
  53. ^ Wastewater Engineering: Treatment and Resource Recovery, Metcalf & Eddy | AECOM, 5th ed., McGraw-Hill, NY, ©2013; ISBN 978-0-07-340118-8
  54. ^ Niu, Q., Qiao, W., Qiang, H., Hojo, T., & Li, Y. Y. (2013). Mesophilic methane fermentation of chicken manure at a wide range of ammonia concentration: stability, inhibition and recovery. Bioresource Technology, 137, 358-367.
  55. ^ Feedstocks. Anaerobic Digestion UK. 15 December 2020. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  56. ^ Alfagy.com, retrieved 16.08.09 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  57. ^ Anaerobic digestion feedstock classification 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, wisbiorefine.org. Retrieved 24.10.07.
  58. ^ Lemmer, A. & Oeschsner, H. Co-fermentation of grass and forage maize 28 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Energy, Landtechnik, 5/11, p 56, ltnet.lv-h.de
  59. ^ Morton Barlaz, Amy Banister, Gary Hater, Jeffrey Chanton and Roger Green, Money For Old Rope – An Anaerobic Digestion Article With Historic Significance, waste-management-world.com. via anaerobic-digestion.com Retrieved 24.10.07.
  60. ^ Benner, Ronald (1989). "Book Review: Biology of anaerobic microorganisms". Limnology and Oceanography. 34 (3): 647. Bibcode:1989LimOc..34..647B. doi:10.4319/lo.1989.34.3.0647.
  61. ^ California Department of Food and Agriculture (19 September 2019). "CDFA invests in dairy methane reduction projects". Morning Ag Clips. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
  62. ^ Anaerobic Digestion Initiative Advisory Committee (ADIAC). . Archived from the original on 13 December 2011.
  63. ^ a b Richards, B.; Cummings, R. J.; Jewell, W. J. (1991). "High rate low solids methane fermentation of sorghum, corn and cellulose". Biomass and Bioenergy. 1 (5): 249–260. Bibcode:1991BmBe....1..249R. doi:10.1016/0961-9534(91)90036-C. hdl:1813/60789.
  64. ^ Richards, B.; Cummings, R. J.; Jewell, W. J.; Herndon, F. G. (1991). "High solids anaerobic methane fermentation of sorghum and cellulose". Biomass and Bioenergy. 1 (1): 47–53. Bibcode:1991BmBe....1...47R. doi:10.1016/0961-9534(91)90051-D.
  65. ^ National Non-Food Crops Centre. Farm-Scale Anaerobic Digestion Plant Efficiency, NNFCC 11-015 14 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  66. ^ Management of Urban Biodegradable Waste, books.google.com. Retrieved 24.10.07.
  67. ^ Anaerobic co-digestion of sewage sludge and rice straw 28 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine, bvsde.ops-oms.org. Retrieved 24.10.07.
  68. ^ Anaerobic digestion of classified municipal solid wastes, seas.ucla.edu. Retrieved 24.10.07.
  69. ^ Achinas, Spyridon; Achinas, Vasileios; Euverink, Gerrit Jan Willem (2017). "A Technological Overview of Biogas Production from Biowaste". Engineering. 3 (3): 299–307. doi:10.1016/J.ENG.2017.03.002.
  70. ^ Economic Assessment of Anaerobic Digestion Technology & its Suitability to UK Farming & Waste Systems (Report, 2nd Edition), NNFCC 10-010 9 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  71. ^ Jerger, D. & Tsao, G. (2006) Feed composition in Anaerobic digestion of biomass, p65
  72. ^ Bruce E. Rittmann; Perry L. McCarty (2001). Environmental Biotechnology. New York: McGraw Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-234553-7.
  73. ^ Hill, D. T.; Barth, C. L. (1977). "A Dynamic Model for Simulation of Animal Waste Digestion". Journal (Water Pollution Control Federation). 49 (10): 2129–2143. JSTOR 25039421.
  74. ^ Hafner, Sasha D.; Rennuit, Charlotte; Triolo, Jin M.; Richards, Brian K. (December 2015). "Validation of a simple gravimetric method for measuring biogas production in laboratory experiments". Biomass and Bioenergy. 83: 297–301. Bibcode:2015BmBe...83..297H. doi:10.1016/j.biombioe.2015.10.003.
  75. ^ Tilley, E., Ulrich, L., Lüthi, C., Reymond, Ph., Zurbrügg, C. (2014) Compendium of Sanitation Systems and Technologies - (2nd Revised Edition). Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology (Eawag), Duebendorf, Switzerland.
  76. ^ Raio, M. (28 August 2018). Zero Waste Our New Future?. Zero Waste Our New Future?. Retrieved from https://drive.google.com/file/d/1pgVFpgTQPzNlxiCiSMvI8Kem-YtEW81R/view?usp=sharing
  77. ^ Anaerobic Digestion 28 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine, wasteresearch.co.uk. Retrieved 24.10.07.
  78. ^ Sea Dumping of Sewage Sludge, encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 22.02.2010.
  79. ^ Ocean Dumping Ban Act (1988), bookrags.com. Retrieved 22.02.2010.
  80. ^ Juniper (2005) MBT: A Guide for Decision Makers – Processes, Policies & Markets 17 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine, juniper.co.uk, (Project funding supplied by Sita Environmental Trust). Retrieved 22.11.06.
  81. ^ Svoboda, I (2003) Anaerobic digestion, storage, olygolysis, lime, heat and aerobic treatment of livestock manures, scotland.gov.uk. Retrieved 17.08.07.
  82. ^ Haase Mechanical Biological Treatment and Wet Anaerobic Digestion 22 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine, haase-energietechnik.de. Retrieved 23.10.07.
  83. ^ Global warming methane could be far more potent than carbon dioxide newmediaexplorer.org. Retrieved 17.08.07.
  84. ^ Renewable Energy Framework, esru.strath.ac.uk. Retrieved 8.11.07.
  85. ^ Friends of the Earth (2004) Anaerobic digestion Briefing Paper, foe.co.uk. Retrieved 17.08.07.
  86. ^ Cardiff University (2005) Anaerobic Digestion Page 28 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine, wasteresearch.co.uk. Retrieved 17.08.07.
  87. ^ Doelle, H. W. (2001) Biotechnology and Human Development in Developing Countries 23 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine, ejbiotechnology.info. Retrieved 19.08.07.
  88. ^ The Clean Development Mechanism in Nepal in The Tiempo Climate Newswatch 29 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine, tiempocyberclimate.org
  89. ^ Benefits of Anaerobic Digestion, afbini.gov.uk. Retrieved 22 February 2010. 9 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  90. ^ Questions about biomass energy 30 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine, dti.gov.uk. Retrieved 17.08.07.
  91. ^ Lazenby, Ruthie (15 August 2022). "RETHINKING MANURE BIOGAS: Policy Considerations to Promote Equity and Protect the Climate and Environment" (PDF). Center for Agriculture and Food Systems, Vermont Law and Graduate School. Retrieved 9 December 2022.
  92. ^ 38% HHV Caterpillar Bio-gas Engine Fitted to Sewage Works | Claverton Group 19 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine, claverton-energy.com
  93. ^ "METHAGEN AD". Sysadvance. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
  94. ^ Alfagy.com 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, "Be Green – Make Gas"
  95. ^ CHP Feed-In Tariffs & Green Energy Financial Support 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, www.alfagy.com
  96. ^ East Bay Municipal Utility District (2008). Anaerobic Digestion of Food Waste (PDF). United States Environmental Protection Agency.
  97. ^ "Organics: Anaerobic Digestion". United States Environmental Protection Agency. 8 June 2015. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  98. ^ Half Britain's homes could be heated by renewable gas 8 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine, nationalgrid.com
  99. ^ Petersson A., Wellinger A. (2009). Biogas upgrading technologies - developments and innovations. IEA Bioenergy Task 37
  100. ^ Biogas flows through Germany's grid 'big time' 14 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, renewableenergyworld.com
  101. ^ . Energy Dictionary. EnergyVortex.com. Archived from the original on 22 September 2018.
  102. ^ Shah, Dhruti (5 October 2010). "Oxfordshire town sees human waste used to heat homes". BBC News. from the original on 5 October 2010. Retrieved 5 October 2010.
  103. ^ Mathiesen, Karl (20 April 2015). "Grass-to-gas plant could be UK's answer to fracking, says Ecotricity". The Guardian.
  104. ^ Bergenson, Angie (23 April 2015). "Green energy plant could be UK's alternative to fracking". Hydrogen Fuel News.
  105. ^ Natural & bioGas Vehicle Association (NVGA). Sweden 21 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  106. ^ Introduction and Spanish organic waste situation, compostnetwork.info. Retrieved 19.08.07.
  107. ^ Vijay, Hema (28 July 2012). "Satisfaction of reducing your carbon footprint". The Hindu. Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  108. ^ . e-wef.org. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
  109. ^ Anaerobic Digestion – An Introduction and Commercial Status in the US – As of 2006, anaerobic-digestion.com. Retrieved 07.12.14
  110. ^ . www.kolumbus.fi. Archived from the original on 6 January 2010.
  111. ^ Roubík, Hynek; Mazancová, Jana; Banout, Jan; Verner, Vladimír (20 January 2016). "Addressing problems at small-scale biogas plants: a case study from central Vietnam". Journal of Cleaner Production. 112, Part 4: 2784–2792. doi:10.1016/j.jclepro.2015.09.114.
  112. ^ . biogas-digester.com. 5 May 2008. Archived from the original on 10 January 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
  113. ^ How Anaerobic Digestion (Methane Recovery) Works, eere.energy.gov. Retrieved 19.08.07.
  114. ^ Anaerobic digestion briefing sheet, foe.co.uk. Retrieved 24.10.07.
  115. ^ GE Energy – Jenbacher Gas Engines for Power Generation, power-technology.com. Retrieved 19 August 2007.
  116. ^ (PDF). defra.gov.uk. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 December 2008.
  117. ^ . afbini.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 10 December 2008.
  118. ^ US 5976373, "Removal of hydrogen sulfide from anaerobic digester gas", issued 2 November 1999 
  119. ^ Meyer-Jens, T.; Matz, G.; Märkl, H. (June 1995). "On-line measurement of dissolved and gaseous hydrogen sulphide in anaerobic biogas reactors". Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology. 43 (2): 341–345. doi:10.1007/BF00172836. S2CID 21901.
  120. ^ Wheles, E.; Pierece, E. (2004). "Siloxanes in landfill and digester gas" (PDF). scsengineers.com. Retrieved 17 August 2007.
  121. ^ (PDF). iea-biogas.net. IEA Bioenergy. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 November 2007.
  122. ^ Tower, P.; Wetzel, J.; Lombard, X. (March 2006). . Applied Filter Technology. Archived from the original on 24 September 2011. Retrieved 30 April 2009., appliedfiltertechnology.com
  123. ^ Richards, B.; Herndon, F. G.; Jewell, W. J.; Cummings, R. J.; White, T. E. (1994). "In situ methane enrichment in methanogenic energy crop digesters". Biomass and Bioenergy. 6 (4): 275–282. Bibcode:1994BmBe....6..275R. doi:10.1016/0961-9534(94)90067-1. hdl:1813/60790.
  124. ^ . nfuonline.com. 28 July 2006. Archived from the original on 15 October 2007.
  125. ^ (PDF). haase-energietechnik.de. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 December 2008.
  126. ^ . waste.nl. 3 May 2005. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
  127. ^ a b "Biomass and biogas". Climate Generation. 25 September 2009.
  128. ^ Oaktech Consultation Response to UK Source Segregation Requirement 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, alexmarshall.me.uk. Retrieved 19.08.07.
  129. ^ UK Strategy for centralised anaerobic digestion, ingentaconnect.com. Retrieved 24.10.07.
  130. ^ Yue, Zhengbo; Teater, Charles; Liu, Yan; MacLellan, James; Liao, Wei (2010). "A sustainable pathway of cellulosic ethanol production integrating anaerobic digestion with biorefining". Biotechnology and Bioengineering. 105 (6): 1031–9. doi:10.1002/bit.22627. PMID 19998279. S2CID 25085927.
  131. ^ Vitoria Plant Information 28 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine, ows.be. Retrieved 24.10.07.
  132. ^ Kompogas Homepage, kompogas.ch. Retrieved 24.10.07. 9 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  133. ^ Dosta, Joan; Galí, Alexandre; Macé, Sandra; Mata-Álvarez, Joan (February 2007). "Modelling a sequencing batch reactor to treat the supernatant from anaerobic digestion of the organic fraction of municipal solid waste". Journal of Chemical Technology & Biotechnology. 82 (2): 158–64. Bibcode:2007JCTB...82..158D. doi:10.1002/jctb.1645.
  134. ^ Clarke Energy Reverse Osmosis Unit, clarke-energy.co.uk. Retrieved 24.10.07. 16 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  135. ^ , virtualviz.com. Retrieved 24.10.07.
  136. ^ a b c Auer; et al. (2017). "Agricultural anaerobic digestion power plants in Ireland and Germany: Policy and practice". Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture. 97 (3): 719–723. Bibcode:2017JSFA...97..719A. doi:10.1002/jsfa.8005. hdl:10197/8085. PMID 27553887. S2CID 32434338.
  137. ^ a b c d e Klinkner, Blake Anthony (2014). "Anaerobic Digestion as a Renewable Energy Source and Waste Management Technology: What Must be Done for This Technology to Realize Success in the United States?". UMass Law Review. 9: 79.
  138. ^ Trasatti, Sergio (18 January 1999). "1799–1999: Alessandro Volta's 'Electric Pile': Two hundred years, but it doesn't seem like it". Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry. 460: 1–4. doi:10.1016/S0022-0728(98)00302-7.
  139. ^ Gijzen, H.J. (2002). "Anaerobic digestion for sustainable development: a natural approach". Water Science and Technology. 45 (10): 321–328. doi:10.2166/wst.2002.0364. PMID 12188565.
  140. ^ Marsh, George (November–December 2008). "Rise of the Anaerobic Digestor". Renewable Energy Focus. 9 (6): 28–30. doi:10.1016/S1755-0084(08)70063-2.
  141. ^ . Water.me.vccs.edu. Archived from the original on 13 April 2020. Retrieved 22 February 2010.
  142. ^ Grando; et al. (December 2017). "Technology overview of biogas production in anaerobic digestion plants: A European evaluation of research and development". Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews. 80: 44–53. doi:10.1016/j.rser.2017.05.079.
  143. ^ Wagenhals; et al. (1924). "Sewage treatment in the United States: A report on the study of 15 representative sewage treatment plants". Public Health. 38: 38. doi:10.1016/S0033-3506(24)80014-8.
  144. ^ Humenik, F.; et al. (2007). "Agstar Conference 2004" (PDF). epa.gov. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  145. ^ Black, Brian C. "How World War I ushered in the century of oil". The Conversation. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  146. ^ Verma, Shefali (2002). Anaerobic Digestion of Biodegradable Organics in Municipal Solid Wastes. New York: Columbia University. p. 12.
  147. ^ Bishop, C.; Shumway, C.; Wandschneider, P. (2010). "Agent heterogeneity in adoption of anaerobic digestion technology: Integrating economic, diffusion, and behavioral innovation theories". Land Economics. 86 (3): 585–608. doi:10.3368/le.86.3.585. S2CID 16916841.
  148. ^ a b c Bangalore; et al. (November 2016). "Policy incentives and adoption of agricultural anaerobic digestion: A survey of Europe and the United States". Renewable Energy. 97: 559–571. doi:10.1016/j.renene.2016.05.062 – via Elsevier Science Direct.
  149. ^ Coker, C. (2017). "Status of organics recycling in the U.K.". Biocycle. 58 (5): 33–34.
  150. ^ North Devon company fined for pollution that devastated fish population Environment Agency, 29 July 2021, accessed 18 October 2022 Note: The North Devon company that caused a pollution incident leading to a devastating fish kill on the River Mole near South Molton has been fined £2,000 and ordered to pay £9,836 in costs.
  151. ^ Pollution from anaerobic digestion plant killed 18,000 fish in the ..., accessed 18 October 2022 Note: Around 18,000 fish are thought to have been killed on a five-mile stretch of the Teifi when 44,000 gallons of pollutant leaked from an anaerobic digestion plant.
  152. ^ Natural Resources Wales to make decision 'soon' on whether to prosecute over River Llynfi pollution incident Fergus Collins, www.countryfile.com, 1 October 2020, accessed 18 October 2022 Note: In July (2020), several miles of the Afon Llynfi at the northern edge of the Brecon Beacons National Park was stripped of all life by a sudden and severe pollution incident.
  153. ^ Anaerobic Digester Plant Explosions – Explosive Risk at Biogas Facilities 21 December 2020 blog.anaerobic-digestion.com, accessed 19 October 2022
  154. ^ It's been 1 year since explosion at Maine mill "...explosion at the Androscoggin Mill ...remarkably, nobody was injured. — on April 15, 2020" newscentermaine.com, accessed 19 October 2022
  155. ^ Pulp digester exploded at IP's Pensacola mill International Paper's containerboard mill in Cantonment, Florida experienced an explosion from a pulp digester that scattered wood fiber, water and pulping liquor over the surrounfing area. 27 Jan 2017 /www.papnews.com, accessed 19 October 2022
  156. ^ EPDM failure causes anaerobic digester explosion Briana Jones March 11, 2013 www.tpomag.com, accessed 19 October 2022
  157. ^ Digester Explosion Kills Two Workers at Wastewater Treatment Plant in Pennsylvania FACE 8733 www.cdc.gov, accessed 19 October 2022
  158. ^ 2 Hurt in Tank Explosion at Missouri Wastewater Plant 12 February 2019 www.powderbulksolids.com, accessed 19 October 2022
  159. ^ Vice-Chancellor thanks staff for quick response to AD incident 6 June 2014 www.harper-adams.ac.uk, accessed 19 October 2022
  160. ^ Sludge power plant collapses in Shropshire 30 May 2014 www.shropshirestar.com, accessed 19 October 2022
  161. ^ a b Risks and safety measures for anaerobic digestion: How can you make your plant safer? www.biogasworld.com, accessed 19 October 2022
  162. ^ Explosion dans un méthaniseur d'une exploitation agricole: 4 April 2018 www.aria.developpement-durable.gouv.fr, accessed 19 October 2022
  163. ^ a b Analysis of accidents in biogas production and upgrading "More than 800 accidents occurred after 2005 among 13,171 European biogas stations (Kotek et al. 2015). Casson et al., (2016) created a database of 169 biogas accidents and the study showed..." October 2015 Renewable Energy 96 doi:10.1016/j.renene.2015.10.017 via www.researchgate.net, accessed 19 October 2022
  164. ^ Accident Analysis of European Biogas Stations January 2015 Chemical Engineering Transactions 43:1933-1938 doi:10.3303/CET1543323 via www.researchgate.net, accessed 19 October 2022
  165. ^ Hydrogen sulphide emissions in a biogas plant 8 November 2005www.aria.developpement-durable.gouv.fr, accessed 19 October 2022
  166. ^ Risks and safety measures for anaerobic digestion: How can you make your plant safer? 2020-12-18 www.biogasworld.com, accessed 19 October 2022
  167. ^ Anaerobic Digestion UK Including Regulations and Objectives anaerobic-digestion.com, accessed 19 October 2022
  168. ^ Lessons for safe design and operation of anaerobic digesters January 2013 Loss Prevention Bulletin via www.researchgate.net, accessed 19 October 2022
  169. ^ Analysis of accidents in biogas production and upgrading Renewable Energy Volume 96, Part B, October 2016, Pages 1127-1134 via www.sciencedirect.com, accessed 19 October 2022

External links edit

  • "Official Website of the Anaerobic Digestion and Bioresources Association". Anaerobic Digestion and Bioresources Association (ADBA).
  • "UK's Official Information Portal on Anaerobic Digestion and Biogas".
  • "American Biogas Council". 9 October 2018.
  • . Archived from the original on 25 December 2010. Retrieved 18 November 2010.


anaerobic, digestion, sequence, processes, which, microorganisms, break, down, biodegradable, material, absence, oxygen, process, used, industrial, domestic, purposes, manage, waste, produce, fuels, much, fermentation, used, industrially, produce, food, drink,. Anaerobic digestion is a sequence of processes by which microorganisms break down biodegradable material in the absence of oxygen 1 The process is used for industrial or domestic purposes to manage waste or to produce fuels Much of the fermentation used industrially to produce food and drink products as well as home fermentation uses anaerobic digestion Anaerobic digester system in GermanyAnaerobic digestion occurs naturally in some soils and in lake and oceanic basin sediments where it is usually referred to as anaerobic activity 2 3 This is the source of marsh gas methane as discovered by Alessandro Volta in 1776 4 5 The digestion process begins with bacterial hydrolysis of the input materials Insoluble organic polymers such as carbohydrates are broken down to soluble derivatives that become available for other bacteria Acidogenic bacteria then convert the sugars and amino acids into carbon dioxide hydrogen ammonia and organic acids In acetogenesis bacteria convert these resulting organic acids into acetic acid along with additional ammonia hydrogen and carbon dioxide amongst other compounds Finally methanogens convert these products to methane and carbon dioxide 6 The methanogenic archaea populations play an indispensable role in anaerobic wastewater treatments 7 Anaerobic digestion is used as part of the process to treat biodegradable waste and sewage sludge As part of an integrated waste management system anaerobic digestion reduces the emission of landfill gas into the atmosphere Anaerobic digesters can also be fed with purpose grown energy crops such as maize 8 Anaerobic digestion is widely used as a source of renewable energy The process produces a biogas consisting of methane carbon dioxide and traces of other contaminant gases 1 This biogas can be used directly as fuel in combined heat and power gas engines 9 or upgraded to natural gas quality biomethane The nutrient rich digestate also produced can be used as fertilizer With the re use of waste as a resource and new technological approaches that have lowered capital costs anaerobic digestion has in recent years received increased attention among governments in a number of countries among these the United Kingdom 2011 10 Germany citation needed Denmark 2011 11 and the United States 12 Contents 1 Process 1 1 Process stages 1 2 Configuration 1 2 1 Batch or continuous 1 2 2 Temperature 1 2 3 Solids content 1 2 4 Complexity 1 2 5 Residence time 1 2 6 Pressure 1 3 Inhibition 2 Feedstocks 2 1 Moisture content 2 2 Contamination 2 3 Substrate composition 3 Applications 3 1 Waste and wastewater treatment 3 2 Power generation 3 3 Grid injection 3 4 Vehicle fuel 3 5 Fertiliser and soil conditioner 3 6 Cooking gas 4 Products 4 1 Biogas 4 2 Digestate 4 3 Wastewater 5 History 5 1 Modern geographical distribution 5 2 Incidents involving digesters 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksProcess editMain article Anaerobic respiration Many microorganisms affect anaerobic digestion including acetic acid forming bacteria acetogens and methane forming archaea methanogens These organisms promote a number of chemical processes in converting the biomass to biogas 13 Gaseous oxygen is excluded from the reactions by physical containment Anaerobes utilize electron acceptors from sources other than oxygen gas These acceptors can be the organic material itself or may be supplied by inorganic oxides from within the input material When the oxygen source in an anaerobic system is derived from the organic material itself the intermediate end products are primarily alcohols aldehydes and organic acids plus carbon dioxide In the presence of specialised methanogens the intermediates are converted to the final end products of methane carbon dioxide and trace levels of hydrogen sulfide 14 In an anaerobic system the majority of the chemical energy contained within the starting material is released by methanogenic archaea as methane 15 Populations of anaerobic microorganisms typically take a significant period of time to establish themselves to be fully effective Therefore common practice is to introduce anaerobic microorganisms from materials with existing populations a process known as seeding the digesters typically accomplished with the addition of sewage sludge or cattle slurry 16 Process stages edit The four key stages of anaerobic digestion involve hydrolysis acidogenesis acetogenesis and methanogenesis 17 The overall process can be described by the chemical reaction where organic material such as glucose is biochemically digested into carbon dioxide CO2 and methane CH4 by the anaerobic microorganisms C6H12O6 3CO2 3CH4 nbsp Anaerobic Digestion Process Flow All process flows are dependent on the balance of between proteins carbs and fats HydrolysisIn most cases biomass is made up of large organic polymers For the bacteria in anaerobic digesters to access the energy potential of the material these chains must first be broken down into their smaller constituent parts These constituent parts or monomers such as sugars are readily available to other bacteria The process of breaking these chains and dissolving the smaller molecules into solution is called hydrolysis Therefore hydrolysis of these high molecular weight polymeric components is the necessary first step in anaerobic digestion 18 Through hydrolysis the complex organic molecules are broken down into simple sugars amino acids and fatty acids Acetate and hydrogen produced in the first stages can be used directly by methanogens Other molecules such as volatile fatty acids VFAs with a chain length greater than that of acetate must first be catabolised into compounds that can be directly used by methanogens 19 AcidogenesisThe biological process of acidogenesis results in further breakdown of the remaining components by acidogenic fermentative bacteria Here VFAs are created along with ammonia carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide as well as other byproducts 20 The process of acidogenesis is similar to the way milk sours AcetogenesisThe third stage of anaerobic digestion is acetogenesis Here simple molecules created through the acidogenesis phase are further digested by acetogens to produce largely acetic acid as well as carbon dioxide and hydrogen 21 MethanogenesisThe terminal stage of anaerobic digestion is the biological process of methanogenesis Here methanogens use the intermediate products of the preceding stages and convert them into methane carbon dioxide and water These components make up the majority of the biogas emitted from the system Methanogenesis is sensitive to both high and low pHs and occurs between pH 6 5 and pH 8 22 The remaining indigestible material the microbes cannot use and any dead bacterial remains constitute the digestate 23 Configuration edit nbsp Comparison of common biogas technologiesAnaerobic digesters can be designed and engineered to operate using a number of different configurations and can be categorized into batch vs continuous process mode mesophilic vs thermophilic temperature conditions high vs low portion of solids and single stage vs multistage processes Continuous process requires more complex design but still it may be more economical than batch process because batch process requires more initial building money and a larger volume of the digesters spread across several batches to handle the same amount of waste as a continuous process digester 24 Higher heat energy is required in a thermophilic system compared to a mesophilic system but the thermophilic system requires much less time and has a larger gas output capacity and higher methane gas content so one has to consider that trade off carefully 25 For solids content low will handle up to 15 solid content Above this level is considered high solids content and can also be known as dry digestion 26 In a single stage process one reactor houses the four anaerobic digestion steps A multistage process utilizes two or more reactors for digestion to separate the methanogenesis and hydrolysis phases 27 Batch or continuous edit Anaerobic digestion can be performed as a batch process or a continuous process In a batch system biomass is added to the reactor at the start of the process The reactor is then sealed for the duration of the process In its simplest form batch processing needs inoculation with already processed material to start the anaerobic digestion In a typical scenario biogas production will be formed with a normal distribution pattern over time Operators can use this fact to determine when they believe the process of digestion of the organic matter has completed There can be severe odour issues if a batch reactor is opened and emptied before the process is well completed A more advanced type of batch approach has limited the odour issues by integrating anaerobic digestion with in vessel composting In this approach inoculation takes place through the use of recirculated degasified percolate After anaerobic digestion has completed the biomass is kept in the reactor which is then used for in vessel composting before it is opened 28 As the batch digestion is simple and requires less equipment and lower levels of design work it is typically a cheaper form of digestion 29 Using more than one batch reactor at a plant can ensure constant production of biogas In continuous digestion processes organic matter is constantly added continuous complete mixed or added in stages to the reactor continuous plug flow first in first out Here the end products are constantly or periodically removed resulting in constant production of biogas A single or multiple digesters in sequence may be used Examples of this form of anaerobic digestion include continuous stirred tank reactors upflow anaerobic sludge blankets expanded granular sludge beds and internal circulation reactors 30 31 Temperature edit The two conventional operational temperature levels for anaerobic digesters determine the species of methanogens in the digesters 32 Mesophilic digestion takes place optimally around 30 to 38 C or at ambient temperatures between 20 and 45 C where mesophiles are the primary microorganisms present Thermophilic digestion takes place optimally around 49 to 57 C or at elevated temperatures up to 70 C where thermophiles are the primary microorganisms present A limit case has been reached in Bolivia with anaerobic digestion in temperature working conditions of less than 10 C The anaerobic process is very slow taking more than three times the normal mesophilic time process 33 In experimental work at University of Alaska Fairbanks a 1 000 litre digester using psychrophiles harvested from mud from a frozen lake in Alaska has produced 200 300 litres of methane per day about 20 to 30 of the output from digesters in warmer climates 34 Mesophilic species outnumber thermophiles and they are also more tolerant to changes in environmental conditions than thermophiles Mesophilic systems are therefore considered to be more stable than thermophilic digestion systems In contrast while thermophilic digestion systems are considered less stable their energy input is higher with more biogas being removed from the organic matter in an equal amount of time The increased temperatures facilitate faster reaction rates and thus faster gas yields Operation at higher temperatures facilitates greater pathogen reduction of the digestate In countries where legislation such as the Animal By Products Regulations in the European Union requires digestate to meet certain levels of pathogen reduction there may be a benefit to using thermophilic temperatures instead of mesophilic 35 Additional pre treatment can be used to reduce the necessary retention time to produce biogas For example certain processes shred the substrates to increase the surface area or use a thermal pretreatment stage such as pasteurisation to significantly enhance the biogas output The pasteurisation process can also be used to reduce the pathogenic concentration in the digestate leaving the anaerobic digester Pasteurisation may be achieved by heat treatment combined with maceration of the solids Solids content edit In a typical scenario three different operational parameters are associated with the solids content of the feedstock to the digesters High solids dry stackable substrate High solids wet pumpable substrate Low solids wet pumpable substrate nbsp Design of a dry solid state anaerobic digestion AD biogas plantHigh solids dry digesters are designed to process materials with a solids content between 25 and 40 Unlike wet digesters that process pumpable slurries high solids dry stackable substrate digesters are designed to process solid substrates without the addition of water The primary styles of dry digesters are continuous vertical plug flow and batch tunnel horizontal digesters Continuous vertical plug flow digesters are upright cylindrical tanks where feedstock is continuously fed into the top of the digester and flows downward by gravity during digestion In batch tunnel digesters the feedstock is deposited in tunnel like chambers with a gas tight door Neither approach has mixing inside the digester The amount of pretreatment such as contaminant removal depends both upon the nature of the waste streams being processed and the desired quality of the digestate Size reduction grinding is beneficial in continuous vertical systems as it accelerates digestion while batch systems avoid grinding and instead require structure e g yard waste to reduce compaction of the stacked pile Continuous vertical dry digesters have a smaller footprint due to the shorter effective retention time and vertical design Wet digesters can be designed to operate in either a high solids content with a total suspended solids TSS concentration greater than 20 or a low solids concentration less than 15 36 37 High solids wet digesters process a thick slurry that requires more energy input to move and process the feedstock The thickness of the material may also lead to associated problems with abrasion High solids digesters will typically have a lower land requirement due to the lower volumes associated with the moisture 38 High solids digesters also require correction of conventional performance calculations e g gas production retention time kinetics etc originally based on very dilute sewage digestion concepts since larger fractions of the feedstock mass are potentially convertible to biogas 39 Low solids wet digesters can transport material through the system using standard pumps that require significantly lower energy input Low solids digesters require a larger amount of land than high solids due to the increased volumes associated with the increased liquid to feedstock ratio of the digesters There are benefits associated with operation in a liquid environment as it enables more thorough circulation of materials and contact between the bacteria and their food This enables the bacteria to more readily access the substances on which they are feeding and increases the rate of gas production 40 Complexity edit Digestion systems can be configured with different levels of complexity 36 In a single stage digestion system one stage all of the biological reactions occur within a single sealed reactor or holding tank Using a single stage reduces construction costs but results in less control of the reactions occurring within the system Acidogenic bacteria through the production of acids reduce the pH of the tank Methanogenic archaea as outlined earlier operate in a strictly defined pH range 41 Therefore the biological reactions of the different species in a single stage reactor can be in direct competition with each other Another one stage reaction system is an anaerobic lagoon These lagoons are pond like earthen basins used for the treatment and long term storage of manures 42 Here the anaerobic reactions are contained within the natural anaerobic sludge contained in the pool In a two stage digestion system multistage different digestion vessels are optimised to bring maximum control over the bacterial communities living within the digesters Acidogenic bacteria produce organic acids and more quickly grow and reproduce than methanogenic archaea Methanogenic archaea require stable pH and temperature to optimise their performance 43 Under typical circumstances hydrolysis acetogenesis and acidogenesis occur within the first reaction vessel The organic material is then heated to the required operational temperature either mesophilic or thermophilic prior to being pumped into a methanogenic reactor The initial hydrolysis or acidogenesis tanks prior to the methanogenic reactor can provide a buffer to the rate at which feedstock is added Some European countries require a degree of elevated heat treatment to kill harmful bacteria in the input waste 44 In this instance there may be a pasteurisation or sterilisation stage prior to digestion or between the two digestion tanks Notably it is not possible to completely isolate the different reaction phases and often some biogas is produced in the hydrolysis or acidogenesis tanks Residence time edit The residence time in a digester varies with the amount and type of feed material and with the configuration of the digestion system In a typical two stage mesophilic digestion residence time varies between 15 and 40 days 45 while for a single stage thermophilic digestion residence times is normally faster and takes around 14 days The plug flow nature of some of these systems will mean the full degradation of the material may not have been realised in this timescale In this event digestate exiting the system will be darker in colour and will typically have more odour 46 In the case of an upflow anaerobic sludge blanket digestion UASB hydraulic residence times can be as short as 1 hour to 1 day and solid retention times can be up to 90 days In this manner a UASB system is able to separate solids and hydraulic retention times with the use of a sludge blanket 47 Continuous digesters have mechanical or hydraulic devices depending on the level of solids in the material to mix the contents enabling the bacteria and the food to be in contact They also allow excess material to be continuously extracted to maintain a reasonably constant volume within the digestion tanks 48 Pressure edit A recent development in anaerobic reactor design is High pressure anaerobic digestion HPAD also referred to a Autogenerative High Pressure Digestion AHPD This technique produces a biogas with a elevated methane content The produced carbon dioxide in biogas dissolves more into the water phase under pressure then methane does Hence the produced biogas is richer in methane Research at the University of Groningen demonstrated that the bacterial community changes in composition under the influence of pressure 49 Individual bacteria species have their optimum circumstances in which they grow and replicate the fastest Commonly known are pH temperature salinity etc but pressure is also one of them Some pieces have adapted to life in the deep oceans where pressure is much higher then at sea level This makes it possible in the similar vain as other process parameters such as Temperature Retention Time pH to influence the anaerobic digestion process Inhibition edit nbsp nbsp Left Farm based maize silage digester located near Neumunster in Germany 2007 the green inflatable biogas holder is shown on top of the digester Right Two stage low solids UASB digestion component of a mechanical biological treatment system near Tel Aviv the process water is seen in balance tank and sequencing batch reactor 2005 The anaerobic digestion process can be inhibited by several compounds affecting one or more of the bacterial groups responsible for the different organic matter degradation steps The degree of the inhibition depends among other factors on the concentration of the inhibitor in the digester Potential inhibitors are ammonia 50 sulfide light metal ions Na K Mg Ca Al heavy metals some organics chlorophenols halogenated aliphatics N substituted aromatics long chain fatty acids etc 51 Total ammonia nitrogen TAN has been shown to inhibit production of methane Furthermore it destabilises the microbial community impacting the synthesis of acetic acid Acetic acid is one of the driving forces in methane production At an excess of 5000 mg L TAN pH adjustment is needed to keep the reaction stable 52 A TAN concentration above 1700 1800 mg L inhibits methane production and yield decreases at greater TAN concentrations High TAN concentrations cause the reaction to turn acidic and lead to a domino effect of inhibition 52 Total ammonia nitrogen is the combination of free ammonia and ionized ammonia TAN is produced through degrading material high in nitrogen typically proteins and will naturally build in anaerobic digestion This is depending on the organic feed stock fed to the system In typical wastewater treatment practices TAN reduction is done with via nitrification Nitrification is an aerobic process where TAN is consumed by aerobic heterotrophic bacteria These bacteria release nitrate and nitrite which are later converted to nitrogen gas through the denitrification process 53 Hydrolysis and acidogenesis can also be impacted by TAN concentration In mesophilic conditions inhibition for hydrolysis was found to occur at 5500 mg L TAN while acidogenesis inhibition occurs at 6500 mg L TAN 54 Feedstocks edit nbsp Anaerobic lagoon and generators at the Cal Poly Dairy United StatesThe most important initial issue when considering the application of anaerobic digestion systems is the feedstock to the process 55 Almost any organic material can be processed with anaerobic digestion 56 however if biogas production is the aim the level of putrescibility is the key factor in its successful application 57 The more putrescible digestible the material the higher the gas yields possible from the system Feedstocks can include biodegradable waste materials such as waste paper grass clippings leftover food sewage and animal waste 1 Woody wastes are the exception because they are largely unaffected by digestion as most anaerobes are unable to degrade lignin Xylophagous anaerobes lignin consumers or high temperature pretreatment such as pyrolysis can be used to break lignin down Anaerobic digesters can also be fed with specially grown energy crops such as silage for dedicated biogas production In Germany and continental Europe these facilities are referred to as biogas plants A codigestion or cofermentation plant is typically an agricultural anaerobic digester that accepts two or more input materials for simultaneous digestion 58 The length of time required for anaerobic digestion depends on the chemical complexity of the material Material rich in easily digestible sugars breaks down quickly whereas intact lignocellulosic material rich in cellulose and hemicellulose polymers can take much longer to break down 59 Anaerobic microorganisms are generally unable to break down lignin the recalcitrant aromatic component of biomass 60 Anaerobic digesters were originally designed for operation using sewage sludge and manures Sewage and manure are not however the material with the most potential for anaerobic digestion as the biodegradable material has already had much of the energy content taken out by the animals that produced it Therefore many digesters operate with codigestion of two or more types of feedstock For example in a farm based digester that uses dairy manure as the primary feedstock 61 the gas production may be significantly increased by adding a second feedstock e g grass and corn typical on farm feedstock or various organic byproducts such as slaughterhouse waste fats oils and grease from restaurants organic household waste etc typical off site feedstock 62 Digesters processing dedicated energy crops can achieve high levels of degradation and biogas production 37 63 64 Slurry only systems are generally cheaper but generate far less energy than those using crops such as maize and grass silage by using a modest amount of crop material 30 an anaerobic digestion plant can increase energy output tenfold for only three times the capital cost relative to a slurry only system 65 Moisture content edit A second consideration related to the feedstock is moisture content Drier stackable substrates such as food and yard waste are suitable for digestion in tunnel like chambers Tunnel style systems typically have near zero wastewater discharge as well so this style of system has advantages where the discharge of digester liquids are a liability The wetter the material the more suitable it will be to handling with standard pumps instead of energy intensive concrete pumps and physical means of movement Also the wetter the material the more volume and area it takes up relative to the levels of gas produced The moisture content of the target feedstock will also affect what type of system is applied to its treatment To use a high solids anaerobic digester for dilute feedstocks bulking agents such as compost should be applied to increase the solids content of the input material 66 Another key consideration is the carbon nitrogen ratio of the input material This ratio is the balance of food a microbe requires to grow the optimal C N ratio is 20 30 1 67 Excess N can lead to ammonia inhibition of digestion 63 Contamination edit The level of contamination of the feedstock material is a key consideration when using wet digestion or plug flow digestion If the feedstock to the digesters has significant levels of physical contaminants such as plastic glass or metals then processing to remove the contaminants will be required for the material to be used 68 If it is not removed then the digesters can be blocked and will not function efficiently This contamination issue does not occur with dry digestion or solid state anaerobic digestion SSAD plants since SSAD handles dry stackable biomass with a high percentage of solids 40 60 in gas tight chambers called fermenter boxes 69 It is with this understanding that mechanical biological treatment plants are designed The higher the level of pretreatment a feedstock requires the more processing machinery will be required and hence the project will have higher capital costs National Non Food Crops Centre 70 After sorting or screening to remove any physical contaminants from the feedstock the material is often shredded minced and mechanically or hydraulically pulped to increase the surface area available to microbes in the digesters and hence increase the speed of digestion The maceration of solids can be achieved by using a chopper pump to transfer the feedstock material into the airtight digester where anaerobic treatment takes place Substrate composition edit Substrate composition is a major factor in determining the methane yield and methane production rates from the digestion of biomass Techniques to determine the compositional characteristics of the feedstock are available while parameters such as solids elemental and organic analyses are important for digester design and operation 71 Methane yield can be estimated from the elemental composition of substrate along with an estimate of its degradability the fraction of the substrate that is converted to biogas in a reactor 72 In order to predict biogas composition the relative fractions of methane and carbon dioxide it is necessary to estimate carbon dioxide partitioning between the aqueous and gas phases which requires additional information reactor temperature pH and substrate composition and a chemical speciation model 73 Direct measurements of biomethanation potential are also made using gas evolution or more recent gravimetric assays 74 Applications edit nbsp Schematic of an anaerobic digester as part of a sanitation system It produces a digested slurry digestate that can be used as a fertilizer and biogas that can be used for energy 75 Using anaerobic digestion technologies can help to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases in a number of key ways Replacement of fossil fuels Reducing or eliminating the energy footprint of waste treatment plants Reducing methane emission from landfills Displacing industrially produced chemical fertilizers Reducing vehicle movements Reducing electrical grid transportation losses Reducing usage of LP Gas for cooking An important component of the Zero Waste initiatives 76 Waste and wastewater treatment edit source source source source source source source source Anaerobic digesters in a sewage treatment plant The methane gas is managed by burning through a gas flare Anaerobic digestion is particularly suited to organic material and is commonly used for industrial effluent wastewater and sewage sludge treatment 77 Anaerobic digestion a simple process can greatly reduce the amount of organic matter which might otherwise be destined to be dumped at sea 78 dumped in landfills or burnt in incinerators 79 Pressure from environmentally related legislation on solid waste disposal methods in developed countries has increased the application of anaerobic digestion as a process for reducing waste volumes and generating useful byproducts It may either be used to process the source separated fraction of municipal waste or alternatively combined with mechanical sorting systems to process residual mixed municipal waste These facilities are called mechanical biological treatment plants 80 81 82 If the putrescible waste processed in anaerobic digesters were disposed of in a landfill it would break down naturally and often anaerobically In this case the gas will eventually escape into the atmosphere As methane is about 20 times more potent as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide this has significant negative environmental effects 83 In countries that collect household waste the use of local anaerobic digestion facilities can help to reduce the amount of waste that requires transportation to centralized landfill sites or incineration facilities This reduced burden on transportation reduces carbon emissions from the collection vehicles If localized anaerobic digestion facilities are embedded within an electrical distribution network they can help reduce the electrical losses associated with transporting electricity over a national grid 84 Power generation edit See also Electrical energy efficiency on United States farms In developing countries simple home and farm based anaerobic digestion systems offer the potential for low cost energy for cooking and lighting 33 85 86 87 From 1975 China and India have both had large government backed schemes for adaptation of small biogas plants for use in the household for cooking and lighting At present projects for anaerobic digestion in the developing world can gain financial support through the United Nations Clean Development Mechanism if they are able to show they provide reduced carbon emissions 88 Methane and power produced in anaerobic digestion facilities can be used to replace energy derived from fossil fuels and hence reduce emissions of greenhouse gases because the carbon in biodegradable material is part of a carbon cycle The carbon released into the atmosphere from the combustion of biogas has been removed by plants for them to grow in the recent past usually within the last decade but more typically within the last growing season If the plants are regrown taking the carbon out of the atmosphere once more the system will be carbon neutral 89 90 In contrast carbon in fossil fuels has been sequestered in the earth for many millions of years the combustion of which increases the overall levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere Power generation through anaerobic digestors is best suited to large scale operations rather than small farms as large operations have the volume of manure that is able to make the systems financially viable 91 Biogas from sewage sludge treatment is sometimes used to run a gas engine to produce electrical power some or all of which can be used to run the sewage works 92 Some waste heat from the engine is then used to heat the digester The waste heat is in general enough to heat the digester to the required temperatures The power potential from sewage works is limited in the UK there are about 80 MW total of such generation with the potential to increase to 150 MW which is insignificant compared to the average power demand in the UK of about 35 000 MW The scope for biogas generation from nonsewage waste biological matter energy crops food waste abattoir waste etc is much higher estimated to be capable of about 3 000 MW 93 Farm biogas plants using animal waste and energy crops are expected to contribute to reducing CO2 emissions and strengthen the grid while providing UK farmers with additional revenues 94 Some countries offer incentives in the form of for example feed in tariffs for feeding electricity onto the power grid to subsidize green energy production 1 95 In Oakland California at the East Bay Municipal Utility District s main wastewater treatment plant EBMUD food waste is currently codigested with primary and secondary municipal wastewater solids and other high strength wastes Compared to municipal wastewater solids digestion alone food waste codigestion has many benefits Anaerobic digestion of food waste pulp from the EBMUD food waste process provides a higher normalized energy benefit compared to municipal wastewater solids 730 to 1 300 kWh per dry ton of food waste applied compared to 560 to 940 kWh per dry ton of municipal wastewater solids applied 96 97 Grid injection edit Biogas grid injection is the injection of biogas into the natural gas grid 98 The raw biogas has to be previously upgraded to biomethane This upgrading implies the removal of contaminants such as hydrogen sulphide or siloxanes as well as the carbon dioxide Several technologies are available for this purpose the most widely implemented being pressure swing adsorption PSA water or amine scrubbing absorption processes and in recent years membrane separation 99 As an alternative the electricity and the heat can be used for on site generation 100 resulting in a reduction of losses in the transportation of energy Typical energy losses in natural gas transmission systems range from 1 2 whereas the current energy losses on a large electrical system range from 5 8 101 In October 2010 Didcot Sewage Works became the first in the UK to produce biomethane gas supplied to the national grid for use in up to 200 homes in Oxfordshire 102 By 2017 UK electricity firm Ecotricity plan to have digester fed by locally sourced grass 103 fueling 6000 homes 104 Vehicle fuel edit After upgrading with the above mentioned technologies the biogas transformed into biomethane can be used as vehicle fuel in adapted vehicles This use is very extensive in Sweden where over 38 600 gas vehicles exist and 60 of the vehicle gas is biomethane generated in anaerobic digestion plants 105 Fertiliser and soil conditioner edit The solid fibrous component of the digested material can be used as a soil conditioner to increase the organic content of soils Digester liquor can be used as a fertiliser to supply vital nutrients to soils instead of chemical fertilisers that require large amounts of energy to produce and transport The use of manufactured fertilisers is therefore more carbon intensive than the use of anaerobic digester liquor fertiliser In countries such as Spain where many soils are organically depleted the markets for the digested solids can be equally as important as the biogas 106 Cooking gas edit By using a bio digester which produces the bacteria required for decomposing cooking gas is generated The organic waste like fallen leaves kitchen waste food waste etc are fed into a crusher unit where it is mixed with a small amount of water The mixture is then fed into the bio digester where the archaea decomposes it to produce cooking gas This gas is piped to kitchen stove A 2 cubic meter bio digester can produce 2 cubic meters of cooking gas This is equivalent to 1 kg of LPG The notable advantage of using a bio digester is the sludge which is a rich organic manure 107 Products editThe three principal products of anaerobic digestion are biogas digestate and water 36 108 109 Biogas edit Typical composition of biogas Compound Formula Methane CH4 50 75Carbon dioxide CO2 25 50Nitrogen N2 0 10Hydrogen H2 0 1Hydrogen sulfide H2 S 0 3Oxygen O2 0 0Source www kolumbus fi 2007 110 Main article Biogas nbsp Biogas holder with lightning protection rods and backup gas flare nbsp Biogas carrying pipesBiogas is the ultimate waste product of the bacteria feeding off the input biodegradable feedstock 111 the methanogenesis stage of anaerobic digestion is performed by archaea a micro organism on a distinctly different branch of the phylogenetic tree of life to bacteria and is mostly methane and carbon dioxide 112 113 with a small amount hydrogen and trace hydrogen sulfide As produced biogas also contains water vapor with the fractional water vapor volume a function of biogas temperature 39 Most of the biogas is produced during the middle of the digestion after the bacterial population has grown and tapers off as the putrescible material is exhausted 114 The gas is normally stored on top of the digester in an inflatable gas bubble or extracted and stored next to the facility in a gas holder The methane in biogas can be burned to produce both heat and electricity usually with a reciprocating engine or microturbine 115 unreliable source often in a cogeneration arrangement where the electricity and waste heat generated are used to warm the digesters or to heat buildings Excess electricity can be sold to suppliers or put into the local grid Electricity produced by anaerobic digesters is considered to be renewable energy and may attract subsidies 116 Biogas does not contribute to increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations because the gas is not released directly into the atmosphere and the carbon dioxide comes from an organic source with a short carbon cycle Biogas may require treatment or scrubbing to refine it for use as a fuel 117 Hydrogen sulfide a toxic product formed from sulfates in the feedstock is released as a trace component of the biogas National environmental enforcement agencies such as the U S Environmental Protection Agency or the English and Welsh Environment Agency put strict limits on the levels of gases containing hydrogen sulfide and if the levels of hydrogen sulfide in the gas are high gas scrubbing and cleaning equipment such as amine gas treating will be needed to process the biogas to within regionally accepted levels 118 Alternatively the addition of ferrous chloride FeCl2 to the digestion tanks inhibits hydrogen sulfide production 119 Volatile siloxanes can also contaminate the biogas such compounds are frequently found in household waste and wastewater In digestion facilities accepting these materials as a component of the feedstock low molecular weight siloxanes volatilise into biogas When this gas is combusted in a gas engine turbine or boiler siloxanes are converted into silicon dioxide SiO2 which deposits internally in the machine increasing wear and tear 120 121 Practical and cost effective technologies to remove siloxanes and other biogas contaminants are available at the present time 122 In certain applications in situ treatment can be used to increase the methane purity by reducing the offgas carbon dioxide content purging the majority of it in a secondary reactor 123 In countries such as Switzerland Germany and Sweden the methane in the biogas may be compressed for it to be used as a vehicle transportation fuel or input directly into the gas mains 124 In countries where the driver for the use of anaerobic digestion are renewable electricity subsidies this route of treatment is less likely as energy is required in this processing stage and reduces the overall levels available to sell 125 Digestate edit Main article digestate Digestate is the solid remnants of the original input material to the digesters that the microbes cannot use It also consists of the mineralised remains of the dead bacteria from within the digesters Digestate can come in three forms fibrous liquor or a sludge based combination of the two fractions In two stage systems different forms of digestate come from different digestion tanks In single stage digestion systems the two fractions will be combined and if desired separated by further processing 126 127 nbsp Acidogenic anaerobic digestateThe second byproduct acidogenic digestate is a stable organic material consisting largely of lignin and cellulose but also of a variety of mineral components in a matrix of dead bacterial cells some plastic may be present The material resembles domestic compost and can be used as such or to make low grade building products such as fibreboard 128 129 The solid digestate can also be used as feedstock for ethanol production 130 The third byproduct is a liquid methanogenic digestate rich in nutrients which can be used as a fertiliser depending on the quality of the material being digested 127 Levels of potentially toxic elements PTEs should be chemically assessed This will depend upon the quality of the original feedstock In the case of most clean and source separated biodegradable waste streams the levels of PTEs will be low In the case of wastes originating from industry the levels of PTEs may be higher and will need to be taken into consideration when determining a suitable end use for the material Digestate typically contains elements such as lignin that cannot be broken down by the anaerobic microorganisms Also the digestate may contain ammonia that is phytotoxic and may hamper the growth of plants if it is used as a soil improving material For these two reasons a maturation or composting stage may be employed after digestion Lignin and other materials are available for degradation by aerobic microorganisms such as fungi helping reduce the overall volume of the material for transport During this maturation the ammonia will be oxidized into nitrates improving the fertility of the material and making it more suitable as a soil improver Large composting stages are typically used by dry anaerobic digestion technologies 131 132 Wastewater edit The final output from anaerobic digestion systems is water which originates both from the moisture content of the original waste that was treated and water produced during the microbial reactions in the digestion systems This water may be released from the dewatering of the digestate or may be implicitly separate from the digestate The wastewater exiting the anaerobic digestion facility will typically have elevated levels of biochemical oxygen demand BOD and chemical oxygen demand COD These measures of the reactivity of the effluent indicate an ability to pollute Some of this material is termed hard COD meaning it cannot be accessed by the anaerobic bacteria for conversion into biogas If this effluent were put directly into watercourses it would negatively affect them by causing eutrophication As such further treatment of the wastewater is often required This treatment will typically be an oxidation stage wherein air is passed through the water in a sequencing batch reactors or reverse osmosis unit 133 134 135 History edit nbsp Gas street lampThe history of anaerobic digestion is a long one beginning as early as tenth century BCE in Assyria where biogas was used to heat bath water 136 137 Reported scientific interest in the manufacturing of gas produced by the natural decomposition of organic matter dates from the 17th century when Robert Boyle 1627 1691 and Stephen Hales 1677 1761 noted that disturbing the sediment of streams and lakes released flammable gas 15 In 1778 the Italian physicist Alessandro Volta 1745 1827 the father of electrochemistry 138 scientifically identified that gas as methane 139 In 1808 Sir Humphry Davy proved the presence of methane in the gases produced by cattle manure 17 The first known anaerobic digester was built in 1859 at a leper colony in Bombay in India 140 In 1895 the technology was developed in Exeter England where a septic tank was used to generate gas for the sewer gas destructor lamp a type of gas lighting Also in England in 1904 the first dual purpose tank for both sedimentation and sludge treatment was installed in Hampton London nbsp Imhoff tankBy the early 20th century anaerobic digestion systems began to resemble the technology as it appears today 137 In 1906 Karl Imhoff created the Imhoff tank 141 an early form of anaerobic digester and model wastewater treatment system throughout the early 20th century 142 143 After 1920 closed tank systems began to replace the previously common use of anaerobic lagoons covered earthen basins used to treat volatile solids Research on anaerobic digestion began in earnest in the 1930s 144 Around the time of World War I production from biofuels slowed as petroleum production increased and its uses were identified 145 While fuel shortages during World War II re popularized anaerobic digestion interest in the technology decreased again after the war ended 137 146 Similarly the 1970s energy crisis sparked interest in anaerobic digestion 137 In addition to high energy prices factors affecting the adoption of anaerobic digestion systems include receptivity to innovation pollution penalties policy incentives and the availability of subsidies and funding opportunities 147 148 Modern geographical distribution edit Today anaerobic digesters are commonly found alongside farms to reduce nitrogen run off from manure or wastewater treatment facilities to reduce the costs of sludge disposal 137 Agricultural anaerobic digestion for energy production has become most popular in Germany where there were 8 625 digesters in 2014 136 In the United Kingdom there were 259 facilities by 2014 and 500 projects planned to become operational by 2019 149 In the United States there were 191 operational plants across 34 states in 2012 148 Policy may explain why adoption rates are so different across these countries Feed in tariffs in Germany were enacted in 1991 also known as FIT providing long term contracts compensating investments in renewable energy generation Consequently between 1991 and 1998 the number of anaerobic digester plants in Germany grew from 20 to 517 In the late 1990s energy prices in Germany varied and investors became unsure of the market s potential The German government responded by amending FIT four times between 2000 and 2011 increasing tariffs and improving the profitability of anaerobic digestion and resulting in reliable returns for biogas production and continued high adoption rates across the country 148 136 Incidents involving digesters edit Anaerobic digesters have caused Fish kills e g River Mole Devon 150 River Teifi 151 Afon Llynfi 152 and loss of human life e g Avonmouth explosion There have been explosions of ADs in the US 153 Jay Maine Pixelle Specialty Solutions Androscoggin Mill 154 Pensacola Cantonment 22 January 2017 Kamyr digester explosion 155 EPDM failure March 2013 Aumsville Oregon 156 February 6 1987 Pennsylvania two workers at a wastewater treatment plant were re draining a sewage digester when an explosion lifted the 30 ton floating cover killing both workers instantly 157 Southwest Wastewater Treatment Plant in Springfield Missouri 158 in the UK for example at Avonmouth and at Harper Adams College Newport Shropshire 159 160 plus In Europe there were about 800 accidents on biogas plants between 2005 and 2015 e g in France Saint Fargeau 161 162 though few of them were serious with direct consequences for the human population 163 164 Fortunately according to one source less than a dozen of them had consequences on humans for example the incident at Rhadereistedt Germany 4 dead 161 165 Safety analyses have included 166 167 168 a 2016 study compiled a database of 169 accidents involving ADs 169 163 See also editAnaerobic digester types Anaerobic organism Avonmouth explosion Bioconversion of biomass to mixed alcohol fuels Carbon dioxide air capture Comparison of anaerobic and aerobic digestion Environmental issues with energy Global Methane Initiative Hypoxia environmental Methane capture Microbiology of decomposition Pasteur point Relative cost of electricity generated by different sources Sanitation Sewage treatment Upflow anaerobic sludge blanket digestion UASB nbsp Renewable energy portal nbsp Energy portal nbsp Environment portalReferences edit a b c d Anaerobic Digestion NNFCC Renewable Fuels and Energy Factsheet National Non Food Crops Centre Retrieved 22 November 2011 Koyama Tadashiro 1963 Gaseous metabolism in lake sediments and paddy soils and the production of atmospheric methane and hydrogen Journal of Geophysical Research 68 13 3971 3973 Bibcode 1963JGR 68 3971K doi 10 1029 JZ068i013p03971 Pamatmat Mario Macalalag Bhagwat Ashok M 1973 Anaerobic metabolism in Lake Washington sediments PDF Limnology and Oceanography 18 4 611 627 Bibcode 1973LimOc 18 611P doi 10 4319 lo 1973 18 4 0611 Archived from the original PDF on 16 December 2013 Zehnder Alexander J B 1978 Ecology of methane formation In Mitchell Ralph ed Water Pollution Microbiology Vol 2 New York Wiley pp 349 376 ISBN 978 0 471 01902 2 MacGregor A N Keeney D R 1973 Methane formation by lake sediments during in vitro incubations Journal of the American Water Resources Association 9 6 1153 1158 Bibcode 1973JAWRA 9 1153M doi 10 1111 j 1752 1688 1973 tb05854 x Anaerobic digestion reference sheet PDF waste nl Archived from the original PDF on 5 October 2011 Retrieved 25 October 2007 Tabatabaei Meisam 2010 Importance of the methanogenic archaea populations in anaerobic wastewater treatments PDF Process Biochemistry 45 8 1214 1225 doi 10 1016 j procbio 2010 05 017 Agricultural Biogas clarke energy com Retrieved 8 November 2011 Jenbacher Gas Engines clarke energy com Anaerobic Digestion Strategy and Action Plan PDF defra gov uk Retrieved 19 January 2012 Jyllands Posten 29 December 2011 Retrieved 19 January 2012 via Google Translate AgSTAR Data and Trends United States Environmental Protection Agency 3 July 2019 Retrieved 18 October 2019 Evaluation of Opportunities for Converting Indigenous UK Wastes to Fuels and Energy Report National Non Food Crops Centre NNFCC 09 012 Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Adapted from Beychok M 1967 Aqueous Wastes from Petroleum and Petrochemical Plants First ed John Wiley amp Sons LCCN 67019834 a b Fergusen T amp Mah R 2006 Methanogenic bacteria in Anaerobic digestion of biomass p49 The biogas plant unu edu Archived from the original on 2 December 2010 Retrieved 5 November 2007 a b Anaerobic digestion Archived 5 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine waste nl Retrieved 19 08 07 Sleat R Mah R 2006 Hydrolytic Bacteria Anaerobic digestion of biomass p 15 Boone D Mah R 2006 Transitional bacteria in anaerobic digestion of biomass p 35 What is anaerobic digestion PDF sop inria fr Retrieved 24 October 2007 Anaerobic digestion biotank co uk Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2007 How It Works greenthefuture com Anaerobic Digester Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 23 February 2016 Landfill Gas amp Biogas Analyzers Nova Gas Nova Gas Retrieved 23 February 2016 A Igoni Hilkia Abowei M F N Ayotamuno M J Eze C L 16 January 2009 Comparative Evaluation of Batch and Continuous Anaerobic Digesters in Biogas Production from Municipal Solid Waste using Mathematical Models Agricultural Engineering International CIGR Journal ISSN 1682 1130 COMPARING OF MESOPHILIC AND THERMOPHILIC ANAEROBIC FERMENTED SEWAGE SLUDGE BASED ON CHEMICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL TESTS PDF aloki hu Retrieved 23 February 2016 Low and High Solid Anaerobic Digestion Technology www theecoambassador com Retrieved 23 February 2016 Anaerobic Digestion Systems www wtert eu 2008 Retrieved 2 February 2016 aikantechnology com Archived 6 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 10 Feb 2012 Anaerobic digestion Archived 13 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine energy ca gov Retrieved 18 06 09 BIOPAQ IC paques nl Retrieved 19 08 07 Biological processes with Biomar technology Archived 27 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine envirochemie com Retrieved 24 10 2012 Song Y C Kwon S J Woo J H April 2004 Mesophilic and thermophilic temperature co phase anaerobic digestion compared with single stage mesophilic and thermophilic digestion of sewage sludge Water Res 38 7 1653 62 Bibcode 2004WatRe 38 1653S doi 10 1016 j watres 2003 12 019 PMID 15026219 a b Transfer of low cost plastic biodigester technology at household level in Bolivia lrrd org Gupta Sujata 6 November 2010 Biogas comes in from the cold New Scientist London Sunita Harrington p 14 Retrieved 4 February 2011 Animal by products introduction ec europa eu Retrieved 24 10 07 a b c Feasibility study concerning anaerobic digestion in Northern Ireland eunomia co uk Retrieved 19 08 07 Archived 28 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b Jewell W Cummings R Richards B 1993 Methane fermentation of energy crops Maximum conversion kinetics and in situ biogas purification Biomass and Bioenergy 5 3 4 261 278 Bibcode 1993BmBe 5 261J doi 10 1016 0961 9534 93 90076 G Anaerobic Digestion Plant Design 13 November 2014 Retrieved 21 October 2023 a b Richards B Cummings R White T Jewell W 1991 Methods for kinetic analysis of methane fermentation in high solids biomass digesters Biomass and Bioenergy 1 2 65 73 Bibcode 1991BmBe 1 65R doi 10 1016 0961 9534 91 90028 B hdl 1813 60787 Lorenzo Jose M Munekata Paulo E Dominguez Ruben Pateiro Mirian Saraiva Jorge A Franco Daniel 2018 Main Groups of Microorganisms of Relevance for Food Safety and Stability Innovative Technologies for Food Preservation 53 107 doi 10 1016 B978 0 12 811031 7 00003 0 ISBN 978 0 12 811031 7 PMC 7150063 Biomethanation in advances in biochemical engineering and biotechnology books google com Retrieved 24 10 07 Anaerobic Lagoons for Storage Treatment of Livestock Manure Archived 16 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine missouri edu Retrieved 8 11 07 Griffin ME McMahon KD Mackie RI Raskin L 1998 Methanogenic population dynamics during start up of anaerobic digesters treating municipal solid waste and biosolids Biotechnol Bioeng 57 3 342 55 doi 10 1002 sici 1097 0290 19980205 57 3 lt 342 aid bit11 gt 3 0 co 2 i PMID 10099211 Animal By Products Regulations defra gov uk Retrieved 24 10 07 Archived 16 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine HIMET A Two Stage Anaerobic Digestion Process for Converting Waste to Energy Archived 24 February 2003 at the Wayback Machine gastechnology org Retrieved 19 08 07 Jurtshuk Peter 1996 Baron Samuel ed Bacterial Metabolism Medical Microbiology 4th ed Galveston TX University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston ISBN 978 0 9631172 1 2 PMID 21413278 retrieved 21 October 2023 Finstein M S 2006 ArrowBio process integrates preprocessing and advanced anaerobic digestion to recover recyclables and generate electricity Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine oaktech environmental com Retrieved 19 08 07 Biomass conversion the interface of biotechnology chemistry and materials science Berlin Springer 2012 p 115 ISBN 978 3 642 28418 2 Zhao J Li Y Zhang Z February 2023 Hydraulic retention time and pressure affect anaerobic digestion process treating synthetic glucose wastewater PDF Bioresource Technology 370 128531 Bibcode 2023BiTec 37028531Z doi 10 1016 j biortech 2022 128531 PMID 36574891 S2CID 255118892 N Eldem O Akgiray I Ozturk E Soyer B Calli 2004 Ammonia and pH inhibition in anaerobic treatment of wastewaters Part II Model development J Environ Sci Health Part A Vol A39 No 9 https doi org 10 1081 ESE 200026303 Chen Ye Cheng Jay J Creamer Kurt S 2008 Inhibition of anaerobic digestion process A review Bioresource Technology 99 10 4044 4064 Bibcode 2008BiTec 99 4044C doi 10 1016 j biortech 2007 01 057 PMID 17399981 a b Yenigun O amp Demirel B 2013 Ammonia inhibition in anaerobic digestion a review Process Biochemistry 48 5 6 901 911 Wastewater Engineering Treatment and Resource Recovery Metcalf amp Eddy AECOM 5th ed McGraw Hill NY c 2013 ISBN 978 0 07 340118 8 Niu Q Qiao W Qiang H Hojo T amp Li Y Y 2013 Mesophilic methane fermentation of chicken manure at a wide range of ammonia concentration stability inhibition and recovery Bioresource Technology 137 358 367 Feedstocks Anaerobic Digestion UK 15 December 2020 Retrieved 29 August 2021 Alfagy com retrieved 16 08 09 Archived 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Anaerobic digestion feedstock classification Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine wisbiorefine org Retrieved 24 10 07 Lemmer A amp Oeschsner H Co fermentation of grass and forage maize Archived 28 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine Energy Landtechnik 5 11 p 56 ltnet lv h de Morton Barlaz Amy Banister Gary Hater Jeffrey Chanton and Roger Green Money For Old Rope An Anaerobic Digestion Article With Historic Significance waste management world com via anaerobic digestion com Retrieved 24 10 07 Benner Ronald 1989 Book Review Biology of anaerobic microorganisms Limnology and Oceanography 34 3 647 Bibcode 1989LimOc 34 647B doi 10 4319 lo 1989 34 3 0647 California Department of Food and Agriculture 19 September 2019 CDFA invests in dairy methane reduction projects Morning Ag Clips Retrieved 18 October 2019 Anaerobic Digestion Initiative Advisory Committee ADIAC Feedstock Archived from the original on 13 December 2011 a b Richards B Cummings R J Jewell W J 1991 High rate low solids methane fermentation of sorghum corn and cellulose Biomass and Bioenergy 1 5 249 260 Bibcode 1991BmBe 1 249R doi 10 1016 0961 9534 91 90036 C hdl 1813 60789 Richards B Cummings R J Jewell W J Herndon F G 1991 High solids anaerobic methane fermentation of sorghum and cellulose Biomass and Bioenergy 1 1 47 53 Bibcode 1991BmBe 1 47R doi 10 1016 0961 9534 91 90051 D National Non Food Crops Centre Farm Scale Anaerobic Digestion Plant Efficiency NNFCC 11 015 Archived 14 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Management of Urban Biodegradable Waste books google com Retrieved 24 10 07 Anaerobic co digestion of sewage sludge and rice straw Archived 28 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine bvsde ops oms org Retrieved 24 10 07 Anaerobic digestion of classified municipal solid wastes seas ucla edu Retrieved 24 10 07 Achinas Spyridon Achinas Vasileios Euverink Gerrit Jan Willem 2017 A Technological Overview of Biogas Production from Biowaste Engineering 3 3 299 307 doi 10 1016 J ENG 2017 03 002 Economic Assessment of Anaerobic Digestion Technology amp its Suitability to UK Farming amp Waste Systems Report 2nd Edition NNFCC 10 010 Archived 9 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine Jerger D amp Tsao G 2006 Feed composition in Anaerobic digestion of biomass p65 Bruce E Rittmann Perry L McCarty 2001 Environmental Biotechnology New York McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 234553 7 Hill D T Barth C L 1977 A Dynamic Model for Simulation of Animal Waste Digestion Journal Water Pollution Control Federation 49 10 2129 2143 JSTOR 25039421 Hafner Sasha D Rennuit Charlotte Triolo Jin M Richards Brian K December 2015 Validation of a simple gravimetric method for measuring biogas production in laboratory experiments Biomass and Bioenergy 83 297 301 Bibcode 2015BmBe 83 297H doi 10 1016 j biombioe 2015 10 003 Tilley E Ulrich L Luthi C Reymond Ph Zurbrugg C 2014 Compendium of Sanitation Systems and Technologies 2nd Revised Edition Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology Eawag Duebendorf Switzerland Raio M 28 August 2018 Zero Waste Our New Future Zero Waste Our New Future Retrieved from https drive google com file d 1pgVFpgTQPzNlxiCiSMvI8Kem YtEW81R view usp sharing Anaerobic Digestion Archived 28 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine wasteresearch co uk Retrieved 24 10 07 Sea Dumping of Sewage Sludge encyclopedia com Retrieved 22 02 2010 Ocean Dumping Ban Act 1988 bookrags com Retrieved 22 02 2010 Juniper 2005 MBT A Guide for Decision Makers Processes Policies amp Markets Archived 17 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine juniper co uk Project funding supplied by Sita Environmental Trust Retrieved 22 11 06 Svoboda I 2003 Anaerobic digestion storage olygolysis lime heat and aerobic treatment of livestock manures scotland gov uk Retrieved 17 08 07 Haase Mechanical Biological Treatment and Wet Anaerobic Digestion Archived 22 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine haase energietechnik de Retrieved 23 10 07 Global warming methane could be far more potent than carbon dioxide newmediaexplorer org Retrieved 17 08 07 Renewable Energy Framework esru strath ac uk Retrieved 8 11 07 Friends of the Earth 2004 Anaerobic digestion Briefing Paper foe co uk Retrieved 17 08 07 Cardiff University 2005 Anaerobic Digestion Page Archived 28 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine wasteresearch co uk Retrieved 17 08 07 Doelle H W 2001 Biotechnology and Human Development in Developing Countries Archived 23 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine ejbiotechnology info Retrieved 19 08 07 The Clean Development Mechanism in Nepal in The Tiempo Climate Newswatch Archived 29 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine tiempocyberclimate org Benefits of Anaerobic Digestion afbini gov uk Retrieved 22 February 2010 Archived 9 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Questions about biomass energy Archived 30 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine dti gov uk Retrieved 17 08 07 Lazenby Ruthie 15 August 2022 RETHINKING MANURE BIOGAS Policy Considerations to Promote Equity and Protect the Climate and Environment PDF Center for Agriculture and Food Systems Vermont Law and Graduate School Retrieved 9 December 2022 38 HHV Caterpillar Bio gas Engine Fitted to Sewage Works Claverton Group Archived 19 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine claverton energy com METHAGEN AD Sysadvance Retrieved 21 October 2023 Alfagy com Archived 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Be Green Make Gas CHP Feed In Tariffs amp Green Energy Financial Support Archived 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine www alfagy com East Bay Municipal Utility District 2008 Anaerobic Digestion of Food Waste PDF United States Environmental Protection Agency Organics Anaerobic Digestion United States Environmental Protection Agency 8 June 2015 Retrieved 6 July 2019 Half Britain s homes could be heated by renewable gas Archived 8 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine nationalgrid com Petersson A Wellinger A 2009 Biogas upgrading technologies developments and innovations IEA Bioenergy Task 37 Biogas flows through Germany s grid big time Archived 14 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine renewableenergyworld com energy loss transmission loss Energy Dictionary EnergyVortex com Archived from the original on 22 September 2018 Shah Dhruti 5 October 2010 Oxfordshire town sees human waste used to heat homes BBC News Archived from the original on 5 October 2010 Retrieved 5 October 2010 Mathiesen Karl 20 April 2015 Grass to gas plant could be UK s answer to fracking says Ecotricity The Guardian Bergenson Angie 23 April 2015 Green energy plant could be UK s alternative to fracking Hydrogen Fuel News Natural amp bioGas Vehicle Association NVGA Sweden Archived 21 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine Introduction and Spanish organic waste situation compostnetwork info Retrieved 19 08 07 Vijay Hema 28 July 2012 Satisfaction of reducing your carbon footprint The Hindu Retrieved 31 July 2012 Operation of Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plants Manual of Practice MOP 11 Fifth Edition Abstract e wef org Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Anaerobic Digestion An Introduction and Commercial Status in the US As of 2006 anaerobic digestion com Retrieved 07 12 14 Basic Information on Biogas www kolumbus fi Archived from the original on 6 January 2010 Roubik Hynek Mazancova Jana Banout Jan Verner Vladimir 20 January 2016 Addressing problems at small scale biogas plants a case study from central Vietnam Journal of Cleaner Production 112 Part 4 2784 2792 doi 10 1016 j jclepro 2015 09 114 The Absolute Beginner s Guide to Biogas Energy biogas digester com 5 May 2008 Archived from the original on 10 January 2016 Retrieved 4 October 2015 How Anaerobic Digestion Methane Recovery Works eere energy gov Retrieved 19 08 07 Anaerobic digestion briefing sheet foe co uk Retrieved 24 10 07 GE Energy Jenbacher Gas Engines for Power Generation power technology com Retrieved 19 August 2007 UK Biomass Strategy 2007 Working paper 3 Anaerobic Digestion PDF defra gov uk Archived from the original PDF on 16 December 2008 What is anaerobic digestion afbini gov uk Archived from the original on 10 December 2008 US 5976373 Removal of hydrogen sulfide from anaerobic digester gas issued 2 November 1999 Meyer Jens T Matz G Markl H June 1995 On line measurement of dissolved and gaseous hydrogen sulphide in anaerobic biogas reactors Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology 43 2 341 345 doi 10 1007 BF00172836 S2CID 21901 Wheles E Pierece E 2004 Siloxanes in landfill and digester gas PDF scsengineers com Retrieved 17 August 2007 Biogas Upgrading and Utilisation PDF iea biogas net IEA Bioenergy Archived from the original PDF on 28 November 2007 Tower P Wetzel J Lombard X March 2006 New Landfill Gas Treatment Technology Dramatically Lowers Energy Production Costs Applied Filter Technology Archived from the original on 24 September 2011 Retrieved 30 April 2009 appliedfiltertechnology com Richards B Herndon F G Jewell W J Cummings R J White T E 1994 In situ methane enrichment in methanogenic energy crop digesters Biomass and Bioenergy 6 4 275 282 Bibcode 1994BmBe 6 275R doi 10 1016 0961 9534 94 90067 1 hdl 1813 60790 Biogas as a road transport fuel nfuonline com 28 July 2006 Archived from the original on 15 October 2007 Biogas Energy Centre PDF haase energietechnik de Archived from the original PDF on 17 December 2008 Fact sheet Anaerobic Digestion waste nl 3 May 2005 Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 a b Biomass and biogas Climate Generation 25 September 2009 Oaktech Consultation Response to UK Source Segregation Requirement Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine alexmarshall me uk Retrieved 19 08 07 UK Strategy for centralised anaerobic digestion ingentaconnect com Retrieved 24 10 07 Yue Zhengbo Teater Charles Liu Yan MacLellan James Liao Wei 2010 A sustainable pathway of cellulosic ethanol production integrating anaerobic digestion with biorefining Biotechnology and Bioengineering 105 6 1031 9 doi 10 1002 bit 22627 PMID 19998279 S2CID 25085927 Vitoria Plant Information Archived 28 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine ows be Retrieved 24 10 07 Kompogas Homepage kompogas ch Retrieved 24 10 07 Archived 9 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine Dosta Joan Gali Alexandre Mace Sandra Mata Alvarez Joan February 2007 Modelling a sequencing batch reactor to treat the supernatant from anaerobic digestion of the organic fraction of municipal solid waste Journal of Chemical Technology amp Biotechnology 82 2 158 64 Bibcode 2007JCTB 82 158D doi 10 1002 jctb 1645 Clarke Energy Reverse Osmosis Unit clarke energy co uk Retrieved 24 10 07 Archived 16 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine BOD Effluent Treatment virtualviz com Retrieved 24 10 07 a b c Auer et al 2017 Agricultural anaerobic digestion power plants in Ireland and Germany Policy and practice Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture 97 3 719 723 Bibcode 2017JSFA 97 719A doi 10 1002 jsfa 8005 hdl 10197 8085 PMID 27553887 S2CID 32434338 a b c d e Klinkner Blake Anthony 2014 Anaerobic Digestion as a Renewable Energy Source and Waste Management Technology What Must be Done for This Technology to Realize Success in the United States UMass Law Review 9 79 Trasatti Sergio 18 January 1999 1799 1999 Alessandro Volta s Electric Pile Two hundred years but it doesn t seem like it Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry 460 1 4 doi 10 1016 S0022 0728 98 00302 7 Gijzen H J 2002 Anaerobic digestion for sustainable development a natural approach Water Science and Technology 45 10 321 328 doi 10 2166 wst 2002 0364 PMID 12188565 Marsh George November December 2008 Rise of the Anaerobic Digestor Renewable Energy Focus 9 6 28 30 doi 10 1016 S1755 0084 08 70063 2 Course ENV 149 Water me vccs edu Archived from the original on 13 April 2020 Retrieved 22 February 2010 Grando et al December 2017 Technology overview of biogas production in anaerobic digestion plants A European evaluation of research and development Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 80 44 53 doi 10 1016 j rser 2017 05 079 Wagenhals et al 1924 Sewage treatment in the United States A report on the study of 15 representative sewage treatment plants Public Health 38 38 doi 10 1016 S0033 3506 24 80014 8 Humenik F et al 2007 Agstar Conference 2004 PDF epa gov Retrieved 14 July 2014 Black Brian C How World War I ushered in the century of oil The Conversation Retrieved 10 April 2018 Verma Shefali 2002 Anaerobic Digestion of Biodegradable Organics in Municipal Solid Wastes New York Columbia University p 12 Bishop C Shumway C Wandschneider P 2010 Agent heterogeneity in adoption of anaerobic digestion technology Integrating economic diffusion and behavioral innovation theories Land Economics 86 3 585 608 doi 10 3368 le 86 3 585 S2CID 16916841 a b c Bangalore et al November 2016 Policy incentives and adoption of agricultural anaerobic digestion A survey of Europe and the United States Renewable Energy 97 559 571 doi 10 1016 j renene 2016 05 062 via Elsevier Science Direct Coker C 2017 Status of organics recycling in the U K Biocycle 58 5 33 34 North Devon company fined for pollution that devastated fish population Environment Agency 29 July 2021 accessed 18 October 2022 Note The North Devon company that caused a pollution incident leading to a devastating fish kill on the River Mole near South Molton has been fined 2 000 and ordered to pay 9 836 in costs Pollution from anaerobic digestion plant killed 18 000 fish in the accessed 18 October 2022 Note Around 18 000 fish are thought to have been killed on a five mile stretch of the Teifi when 44 000 gallons of pollutant leaked from an anaerobic digestion plant Natural Resources Wales to make decision soon on whether to prosecute over River Llynfi pollution incident Fergus Collins www countryfile com 1 October 2020 accessed 18 October 2022 Note In July 2020 several miles of the Afon Llynfi at the northern edge of the Brecon Beacons National Park was stripped of all life by a sudden and severe pollution incident Anaerobic Digester Plant Explosions Explosive Risk at Biogas Facilities 21 December 2020 blog anaerobic digestion com accessed 19 October 2022 It s been 1 year since explosion at Maine mill explosion at the Androscoggin Mill remarkably nobody was injured on April 15 2020 newscentermaine com accessed 19 October 2022 Pulp digester exploded at IP s Pensacola mill International Paper s containerboard mill in Cantonment Florida experienced an explosion from a pulp digester that scattered wood fiber water and pulping liquor over the surrounfing area 27 Jan 2017 www papnews com accessed 19 October 2022 EPDM failure causes anaerobic digester explosion Briana Jones March 11 2013 www tpomag com accessed 19 October 2022 Digester Explosion Kills Two Workers at Wastewater Treatment Plant in Pennsylvania FACE 8733 www cdc gov accessed 19 October 2022 2 Hurt in Tank Explosion at Missouri Wastewater Plant 12 February 2019 www powderbulksolids com accessed 19 October 2022 Vice Chancellor thanks staff for quick response to AD incident 6 June 2014 www harper adams ac uk accessed 19 October 2022 Sludge power plant collapses in Shropshire 30 May 2014 www shropshirestar com accessed 19 October 2022 a b Risks and safety measures for anaerobic digestion How can you make your plant safer www biogasworld com accessed 19 October 2022 Explosion dans un methaniseur d une exploitation agricole 4 April 2018 www aria developpement durable gouv fr accessed 19 October 2022 a b Analysis of accidents in biogas production and upgrading More than 800 accidents occurred after 2005 among 13 171 European biogas stations Kotek et al 2015 Casson et al 2016 created a database of 169 biogas accidents and the study showed October 2015 Renewable Energy 96 doi 10 1016 j renene 2015 10 017 via www researchgate net accessed 19 October 2022 Accident Analysis of European Biogas Stations January 2015 Chemical Engineering Transactions 43 1933 1938 doi 10 3303 CET1543323 via www researchgate net accessed 19 October 2022 Hydrogen sulphide emissions in a biogas plant 8 November 2005www aria developpement durable gouv fr accessed 19 October 2022 Risks and safety measures for anaerobic digestion How can you make your plant safer 2020 12 18 www biogasworld com accessed 19 October 2022 Anaerobic Digestion UK Including Regulations and Objectives anaerobic digestion com accessed 19 October 2022 Lessons for safe design and operation of anaerobic digesters January 2013 Loss Prevention Bulletin via www researchgate net accessed 19 October 2022 Analysis of accidents in biogas production and upgrading Renewable Energy Volume 96 Part B October 2016 Pages 1127 1134 via www sciencedirect com accessed 19 October 2022External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Biological methanation Official Website of the Anaerobic Digestion and Bioresources Association Anaerobic Digestion and Bioresources Association ADBA UK s Official Information Portal on Anaerobic Digestion and Biogas American Biogas Council 9 October 2018 Introduction to Biogas and Anaerobic Digestion information from eXtension s Livestock and Poultry Environmental Learning Center Archived from the original on 25 December 2010 Retrieved 18 November 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anaerobic digestion amp oldid 1206672969, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.