| Literature DB >> 26260541 |
Peter Aichinger1, Tanush Wadhawan2, Martin Kuprian1, Matthew Higgins3, Christian Ebner4, Christian Fimml5, Sudhir Murthy6, Bernhard Wett7.
Abstract
Making good use of existing water infrastructure by adding organic wastes to anaerobic digesters improves the energy balance of a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) substantially. This paper explores co-digestion load limits targeting a good trade-off for boosting methane production, and limiting process-drawbacks on nitrogen-return loads, cake-production, solids-viscosity and polymer demand. Bio-methane potential tests using whey as a model co-substrate showed diversification and intensification of the anaerobic digestion process resulting in a synergistical enhancement in sewage sludge methanization. Full-scale case-studies demonstrate organic co-substrate addition of up to 94% of the organic sludge load resulted in tripling of the biogas production. At organic co-substrate addition of up to 25% no significant increase in cake production and only a minor increase in ammonia release of ca. 20% have been observed. Similar impacts were measured at a high-solids digester pilot with up-stream thermal hydrolyses where the organic loading rate was increased by 25% using co-substrate. Dynamic simulations were used to validate the synergistic impact of co-substrate addition on sludge methanization, and an increase in hydrolysis rate from 1.5 d(-1) to 2.5 d(-1) was identified for simulating measured gas production rate. This study demonstrates co-digestion for maximizing synergy as a step towards energy efficiency and ultimately towards carbon neutrality.Entities:
Keywords: Co-substrate; Methane yield; Sludge reduction; Wastewater; Whey
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26260541 DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2015.07.033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Water Res ISSN: 0043-1354 Impact factor: 11.236