| Literature DB >> 35630393 |
Andrés Donoso-Bravo1,2,3, María Constanza Sadino-Riquelme1,2, Emky Valdebenito-Rolack1,2,4, David Paulet1,2, Daniel Gómez1,2, Felipe Hansen1,2,4.
Abstract
Modelling in anaerobic digestion will play a crucial role as a tool for smart monitoring and supervision of the process performance and stability. By far, the Anaerobic Digestion Model No. 1 (ADM1) has been the most recognized and exploited model to represent this process. This study aims to propose simple extensions for the ADM1 model to tackle some overlooked operational and metabolic aspects. Extensions for the discontinuous feeding process, the reduction of the active working volume, the transport of the soluble compound from the bulk to the cell interior, and biomass acclimation are presented in this study. The model extensions are included by a change in the mass balance of the process in batch and continuous operation, the incorporation of a transfer equation governed by the gradient between the extra- and intra- cellular concentration, and a saturation-type function where the time has an explicit influence on the kinetic parameters, respectively. By adding minimal complexity to the existing ADM1, the incorporation of these phenomena may help to understand some underlying process issues that remain unexplained by the current model structure, broadening the scope of the model for control and monitoring industrial applications.Entities:
Keywords: ADM1; anaerobic digestion; biogas; cell adaptation; cellular transport; modelling; semi-continuous fed; working volume
Year: 2022 PMID: 35630393 PMCID: PMC9143495 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10050948
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Inlet conditions and assessed simulated operating conditions for the model extensions.
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| VS | 30 kg m−3 | Ammonia nitrogen | 2 kg m−3 |
| COD/VS ratio | 1.5 | Inorganic Carbon | 0.004 kmole m−3 |
| CODs/CODt ratio | 0.1 | VFAs | 0 kg COD m−3 |
| Carbohydrate’s fraction 1 | 0.4 | Soluble gases | 0 kg COD m−3 |
| Protein’s fraction 1 | 0.4 | Anions | 0.04 kmole m−3 |
| Lipid’s fraction 1 | 0.2 | Cations | 0.18 kmole m−3 |
| Inert fraction | 0.2 | ||
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| Continuous | SC | 10 m3 d−1 | |
| 10 blocks of 1.2 h feeding | S1 | 20 m3 d−1 | |
| 5 blocks of 1.2 h feeding | S2 | 40 m3 d−1 | |
| 2 blocks of 1.2 h feeding | S3 | 100 m3 d−1 | |
| 1 block of 1.2 h feeding | S4 | 200 m3 d−1 | |
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| Inlet flow | 10 m3 d−1 | Accumulation rate | |
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| Inlet flow | 10 m3 d−1 | Transport coefficient | |
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| Inlet flow | 10 m3 d−1 | Digester start-up | |
1 The fraction refers only to the biodegradable fraction. VS: Volatile Solid, CODt: total Chemical Oxygen Demand, CODs: soluble Chemical Oxygen Demand, VFAs: Volatile Fatty Acids.
Figure 1Performance of a digester under different feeding strategies. Left: results of 18 days of operation. Right: zoom in on only 3 days of operation.
Figure 2Performance of a digester under different rates of solid material accumulation.
Figure 3Performance of a digester under different extra- intra- cellular transport kinetics. Left: results of 365 days of operation. Right: zoom in on 50 days of operation.
Figure 4Performance of a digester during start-up with different inoculum characteristics. Left: results of a year of operation. Right: zoom in on the first 50 days of operation.
Figure 5Performance of a digester during the adaptation to a co-substrate addition with different substrate characteristics. Left: results of a year of operation. Right: zoom in on the first 50 days of operation.