Title of article :
Methane production in low-cost, unheated, plug-flow digesters treating swine manure and used cooking grease
Author/Authors :
Lansing، نويسنده , , Stephanie R. Martin، نويسنده , , Jay F. and Botero، نويسنده , , Raْl Botero and da Silva، نويسنده , , Tatiana Nogueira and da Silva، نويسنده , , Ederson Dias، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
9
From page :
4362
To page :
4370
Abstract :
A co-digestion investigation was conducted using small-scale digesters in Costa Rica to optimize their ability to treat animal wastewater and produce renewable energy. Increases in methane production were quantified when swine manure was co-digested with used cooking grease in plug-flow digesters that operated at ambient temperate without mixing. The co-digestion experiments were conducted on 12 field-scale digesters (250 L each) using three replications of four treatment groups: the control (T0), which contained only swine manure and no waste oil, and T2.5, T5, and T10, which contained 2.5%, 5%, and 10% used cooking grease (by volume) combined with swine manure. .5 treatment had the greatest methane (CH4) production (45 L/day), a 124% increase from the control, with a total biogas production of 67.3 L/day and 66.9% CH4 in the produced biogas. Increasing the grease concentration beyond T2.5 produced biogas with a lower percentage of CH4, and thus, did not result in any additional benefits. A batch study showed that methane production could be sustained for three months in digesters that co-digested swine manure and used cooking grease without daily inputs. The investigation proved that adding small amounts of grease to the influent is a simple way to double energy production without affecting other digester benefits.
Keywords :
Anaerobic digestion , Biogas , Renewable energy , Co-digestion , Waste
Journal title :
Bioresource Technology
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Bioresource Technology
Record number :
1920832
Link To Document :
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