| Literature DB >> 30547341 |
Van Than Nguyen1,2, Erik Beyer3, Jan Neumann4, Dirk Awe5, Wolfgang Pfeiffer3, Jens Tränckner6.
Abstract
The anaerobic digestion of wastewater from the cleaning of tank cars transporting food and fodder was investigated in both bench and pilot scales with a single-stage, mesophilic (39 °C), completely mixed process. The promising results lead to the planning and building of a 1200-m3 full-scale biogas plant at TS-Clean cleaning station in Fahrbinde, Germany. Due to softened water used in the cleaning of the car tanks, the alkalinity in the digester decreased as predicted by the physicochemical model developed for this treatment process. The model showed that 2.4 kg NaHCO3/m3 of wastewater has to be added in order to control digester pH at 7.2 and to maintain the digester alkalinity at 3.1 g CaCO3/L. In a laboratory study, the decrease of alkalinity caused a volatile organic acids accumulation and pH drop below the optimal range. In this case, if chemical buffering was not added into the digester, the digester deteriorated. In a 3-year investigation, we confirmed that the strongly polluted WW from the cleaning of tank cars transporting food and fodder is suitable for an anaerobic treatment if the organic loading rate is controlled below 4 kg COD/m3/day, digester alkalinity is adjusted by NaHCO3, and micronutrients are added despite constant considerable variations in strength and composition of the wastewater. A biogas yield of 35-45 m3 CH4/m3 of wastewater and a COD elimination of 80-90% were achieved in bench- and pilot-scale experiments and are achieved in the full-scale biogas plant. The full-scale biogas plant is working stable with a biogas yield of 68 m3 biogas/m3 of wastewater.Entities:
Keywords: Anaerobic treatment; Biogas plant; Physiochemical model of anaerobic digestion; Wastewater from the cleaning of tank cars transporting food and fodder
Year: 2018 PMID: 30547341 PMCID: PMC6892768 DOI: 10.1007/s11356-018-3876-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ISSN: 0944-1344 Impact factor: 4.223
Fig. 1Cleaning lanes (a), scheme of old (1) and new (2) concept for the WW treatment at TS-Clean plant in Fahrbinde
Fig. 2Steady-state physicochemical model for anaerobic treatment of strongly polluted WW
The characteristic of the wastewater (mixtures of 1 week)
| Parameter | Average | Ranges | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| pH | 3.34 | 2.98–4.48 | – |
| COD | 96.50 | 31–243 | g/L |
| Total solids (TS) | 4.56 | 1.4–11.2 | % |
| Volatile solids (VS) | 4.33 | 1.3–10.8 | % |
| Total Nitrogen | 632 | 340–1000 | mg/L |
| Total Phosphor | 165 | 130–200 | mg/L |
| Fats | 46.1 | 21.1–58.1 | % |
| Proteins | 7.6 | 1.6–22.8 | % |
| Carbohydrates | 30.3 | 19–44 | % |
| Yeast | 5.8 | 0–16 | % |
| Glycerol | 6.1 | 0–16 | % |
| Others* | 3.9 | 0–11 | % |
| Ca2+ | 0.215 | 0.20–0.23 | g/L |
| Mg2+ | 0.07 | g/L | |
| K+ | 0.515 | 0.49–0.54 | g/L |
| Na+ | 0.20 | 0.18–0.22 | g/L |
*mainly coffee and salt
Fig. 3Schemes and photos of bench-scale digesters
Fig. 4Schemes and photos of pilot-scale anaerobic digesters
Fig. 5Results of bench-scale experiments (B9–B12) with provoked digester imbalances (a–d)
Fig. 6Results of pilot-scale experiments (PSAD1) with the stale digestion process (a, b)
Fig. 7Photo, control screen, and performance data of full-scale biogas plant in Fahrbinde