Showing posts with label Best Biogas Plant design and Construction Resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Best Biogas Plant design and Construction Resources. Show all posts

Anaerobic Digestion of Animal Wastes: Factors to Consider

Anaerobic Digestion of Animal Wastes: Factors to Consider


John Balsam, Updated by Dave Ryan
NCAT Energy Specialists
Published 2006
Publish Post
IP219
PDF IconA printable PDF version of this entire document is available at:
http://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/PDF/anaerobic.pdf
12 pages — 567K



Abstract

Turkeys
Turkeys.
Photo by Jeff Vanuga, courtesy of USDA/ARS.
Anaerobic digestion is an alternative solution to livestock waste management that offers economic and environmental benefits. This publication provides an introduction to the technology of biogas, digester design considerations, and system costs with discussion of the digestion process, production, uses, and risks. Useful tables and further resources are included.

Introduction

Sow with piglet.
Sow with piglet.
Photo by Photo by Jeff Vanuga, courtesy of USDA/ARS.
Rising energy prices, broader regulatory requirements, and increased competition in the marketplace are causing many in American agriculture’s livestock sector to consider anaerobic digestion of animal wastes. They view the technology as a way to cut costs, address environmental concerns, and sometimes generate new revenues.
While hundreds of anaerobic-digestion systems have been installed in Europe and the U.S. since the 1970s, it was not until the 1990s that better designed, more successful projects started to come on line in the U.S. Today, an estimated 97 farm-scale projects are in operation, in start-up, or under construction on swine, dairy, and poultry farms across the country. (1)
Key by-products of anaerobic digestion include digested solids and liquids, which may be used as soil amendments or liquid fertilizers. Methane, the primary component of "biogas," can be used to fuel a variety of cooking, heating, cooling, and lighting applications, as well as to generate electricity. Capturing and using the methane also precludes its release to the atmosphere, where it has twenty-one times more global warming potential than carbon dioxide. (2)
Cow with calves.
Cows and calves.
Photo by Lynn Betts, courtesy of USDA/ARS.
Despite the many benefits, anaerobic digestion systems are not appropriate for all farm operations. A cooperative effort among the U.S. Departments of Agriculture, Energy and the Environmental Protection Agency to promote biogas projects is known as AgStar. AgStar estimates that anaerobic digestion could be cost-effective on about 7,000 U.S. farms. (3) A critical issue is planning; each system needs to be designed to accommodate a variety of factors. This publication provides an overview of those factors and identifies resources for additional detailed information. Several of these resources include computational analysis tools to help users determine whether an anaerobic digestion system could be a cost-effective addition to their operation.


Digestion Process

Anaerobic digestion works in a two-stage process to decompose organic material (i.e., volatile solids) in the absence of oxygen. Biogas is produced as a waste product of digestion. In the first stage, the volatile solids in manure are converted into fatty acids by anaerobic bacteria known as "acid formers." In the second stage, these acids are further converted into biogas by more specialized bacteria known as "methane formers." With proper planning and design, this anaerobic-digestion process, which has been at work in nature for millions of years, can be managed to convert a farm’s waste-stream into an asset.
There are several types of anaerobic digesters.
Covered lagoons—A pool of liquid manure topped by a pontoon or other floating cover. Seal plates extend down the sides of the pontoon into the liquid to prevent exposure of the accumulated gas to the atmosphere. Designed to use manure with two percent or less solid content, this type of digester requires high throughput in order for the bacteria to work on enough solids to produce gas. Most frequently used in warmer southern regions, where the atmospheric heat can help maintain digester temperatures, this is the least expensive of all designs to install and operate. About 18 percent of all digesters presently in use in the U.S. are covered-lagoon systems.
Complete mix—A silo-like tank in which the manure is heated and mixed, designed to handle manure with two to ten percent solids. This is the most expensive system to install and operate, but it’s particularly appropriate for operations that wash out manure. About 28 percent of all digesters in use in the U.S. are of this type.
Plug flow—A cylindrical tank in which the gas and other by-products are pushed out one end by new manure being fed into the other end. This design handles 11 to 13 percent solids and typically employs hot-water piping through the tank to maintain the necessary temperature. Most appropriate for livestock operations that remove manure mechanically rather than washing it out, the plug-flow system accounts for more than half of all digesters presently in use.
Fixed film—A tank is filled with a plastic medium that supports a thin film of bacteria called a biofilm. This design handles one to two percent solids, and uses a shorter retention time, as short as two to six days. (5) Only about one percent of systems currently installed in the U.S. are of this type.
Figure 1. Basic components of an anaerobic-digestion system (4)
Figure 1. Basic components of an anaerobic-digestion system.

There are also a number of hybrid systems being designed and installed, a strong indication that no single system is right for all or even most situations.
Starting the digestion process is not difficult, but it does require patience. The digester tank is filled with water and then heated to the desired temperature. "Seed" sludge from a municipal sewage treatment plant is then added to 20 to 25 percent of the tank’s volume, followed by gradually increasing amounts of fresh manure over a six to eight-week period until the desired loading rate is reached. Assuming that the temperature within the system remains relatively constant, steady gas production should occur in the fourth week after start-up. The bacteria may require two to three months to multiply to an efficient population. (6)
Starting the digestion process is not difficult, but it does require patience.
There are two distinct temperature ranges most suitable for gas production, and different bacteria operate in each of these ranges. Mesophilic bacteria optimally function in the 90° to 110°F range. Thermophilic bacteria are most productive in the 120° to 140°F range. Thermophilic digestion kills more pathogenic bacteria, but it has higher costs due to maintaining higher temperatures, and thermophilic digesters may be less stable. Bacterial digestion in covered lagoons at temperatures below 90°F is called psychrophilic. Psychrophilic means a preference for lower temperatures; however, digestion slows down or stops completely below 60° or 70°F, so these digesters do not produce methane all of the time.
Temperature within the digester is critical, with maximum conversion occurring at approximately 95°F in conventional mesophilic digesters. For each 20°F decrease in temperature, gas production falls by approximately 50 percent. (7)
Even more significant is the need to keep the temperature steady. Optimal operation occurs when the methane formers use all the acids at approximately the same rate that the acid formers produce them. Variations of as little as 5°F can inhibit methane formers enough to tip the balance of the process and possibly cause system failure. (7)
Temperature is just one of the many important factors in successfully starting and operating an anaerobic-digestion system. (7) The other key factors include:
Loading rate. The system’s design will dictate loading rates and contents, but experience indicates that uniform loading, on a daily basis, of manure with 6 to 10 percent solids generally works best. The load’s retention time in the digester will typically range from 15 to 30 days.
Mixing. The loaded manure needs to be mixed regularly to prevent settling and to maintain contact between the bacteria and the manure. The mixing action also prevents the formation of scum and facilitates release of the biogas.
Nutrients. The best digestion occurs with a carbon to nitrogen ratio between 15:1 and 30:1 (optimally 20:1). Most fresh animal manures fall within this range and require no adjustment. Nutrient imbalance can occur, however, if excessive amounts of exposed feedlot manure become part of the load. Adding crop residues or leaves (both can be heavy in carbon) can improve digester performance.
Management. Anaerobic digesters require regular and frequent monitoring, primarily to maintain a constant desired temperature and to ensure that the system flow is not clogged. Failure to properly manage the digester’s sensitivity to its environment can result in a significant decline in gas production and require months to correct.
Safety. Working with anaerobic digester biogas, and especially with methane (the major component of the gas), warrants extreme caution. Methane, when mixed with air, is highly explosive. In addition, because digester gas is heavier than air, it displaces oxygen near the ground, and if hydrogen sulfide is still present, the gas can act as a deadly poison. It is critical that digester systems be designed with adequate venting to avoid these dangerous situations.
The most common means of collecting and storing the gas produced by a digester is with a floating cover—a weighted pontoon that floats on the liquid surface of a collection/storage basin.
Storage. Because of the high pressure and low temperature required, it is impractical to liquefy methane for use as a liquid fuel. Instead, the gas can be collected and stored for a period of time until it can be used. The most common means of collecting and storing the gas produced by a digester is with a floating cover—a weighted pontoon that floats on the liquid surface of a collection/storage basin. Skirt plates on the sides of the pontoon extend down into the liquid, thereby creating a seal and preventing the gas from coming into contact with the open atmosphere. High-pressure storage is also possible, but is both more expensive and more dangerous and should be pursued only with the help of a qualified engineer.

Biogas: A Resource Requiring Care

Biogas produced in an anaerobic digester contains methane (60 to 70 percent), carbon dioxide (30 to 40 percent), and various toxic gases, including hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, and sulfur-derived mercaptans. Biogas also typically contains 1 to 2 percent water vapor.

Energy Content and Relative Value of Biogas

At roughly 60 percent methane, biogas possesses an energy content of 600 Btu/ft3. For comparison, Table 1 presents the energy content of several other well-known energy sources.
Table 1: Energy Content of Common Fuels
Propane
92,000 Btu/gal
Diesel fuel
138,000 Btu/gal
Natural Gas
1,000 Btu/ft3
No. 2 fuel oil
138,000 Btu/gal
Electricity
3,414 Btu/kWh
Coal
25,000,000 Btu/ton
Source: Barker, James C. 2001. Methane Fuel Gas from Livestock Wastes: A Summary. North Carolina State University Cooperative Extension Service, Publication #EBAE 071-80.
Putting these energy-content values in the context of an anaerobic-digestion system means the energy production per animal can be estimated, as seen in Table 2. In Table 3, North Carolina State University’s Cooperative Extension Service has converted the energy-content figures from Table 2 into biogas net returns relative to four other common energy sources.
Table 2. Energy Content of Bio-gas from Various Animals
  Swine
(per
head)
Dairy
(per
head)
Beef
(per
head)
Poultry
(layers)
(per bird)
Animal weight (lbs.)
135
1,400
800
4
Expected Energy Content
Gross energy content (Btu/head/day)
2,300
27,800
16,600
180
Net energy content (Btu/ head/day) (uses 35% of gross to operate digester)
1,500
18,000
10,700
110
Source: Barker, James C. 2001. Methane Fuel Gas from Livestock Wastes: A Summary. North Carolina State University Cooperative Extension Service, Publication #EBAE 071-80.


Table 3. Bio-gas Gas Net Returns from Various Animals
  Swine Dairy Beef Poultry
(layers)
Electricity Equivalent
----- per head per year -----
kWh (20% combined generating efficiency)
32
385
230
2.5
Value (@ $.085/kWh)
$2.76
$32.73
$19.55
$0.21
Natural Gas Equivalent  
Mcf
0.55
6.60
3.90
0.04
Value (@ $11.04/Mcf)
$6.07
$72.89
$43.07
$0.44
Propane (LP Gas) Equivalent  
Gallons
6
72
43
0.45
Value (@ $2.00/gallon)
$12.00
$144.00
$86.00
$0.90
No. 2 Fuel Oil Equivalent        
Gallons
4
48
28
0.3
Value (@ $2.00/gallon)
$8.00
$96.00
$56.00
$0.60
Source: Barker, James C. 2001. Methane Fuel Gas from Livestock Wastes: A Summary. North Carolina State University Cooperative Extension Service, Publication #EBAE 071-80. Updated to 2006 prices by NCAT.

Uses of Biogas

Because of the extreme cost and difficulty of liquefying biogas, it is not feasible for use as a tractor fuel. Biogas has many other on-farm applications, however, including virtually anywhere natural gas is used—for cooking, heating (space heating, water heating, grain drying), cooling, and lighting. In most cases, the equipment designed to burn natural gas will require certain modifications to accommodate the slightly different burn characteristics of biogas.
Biogas can also be used to fuel generators to produce steam and electricity. In some cases, the electricity can be sold to a local utility, possibly in a net metering arrangement. This option should be explored early, however, to make sure the utility is amenable to such arrangements.
North Carolina State University’s Cooperative Extension Service developed several specific examples of how biogas can be applied on-farm:
1. A well-insulated, three-bedroom home that requires 900,000 Btu/day for heating in cold weather could be served by 50 dairy cattle, 600 hogs, or 7,870 layers (assuming that around 35 percent of the biogas produced will be used to maintain the digester’s temperature).

2. A dairy using the national average of 550 kWh/cow/year could generate 70 percent of its electrical needs with biogas (assuming 20 percent generator efficiency and that around 35 percent of the biogas produced will be used to maintain the digester’s temperature).

3. A swine operation that uses about 55 kWh of electricity and 5.75 gallons of LP gas per hog per year (including feed mill and incinerator) could supply 40 percent of its energy needs with biogas (assuming 20 percent generator efficiency and that around 35 percent of the biogas produced will be used to maintain the digester’s temperature).
The number of animals required for a digester system to be cost effective depends upon your situation and upon what you wish to get out of the digester. Some dairy operations with as few as 100 cows have installed cost effective digester systems for odor control that also produce digested solids. (8)
Back to top

Refining Biogas into Biomethane

The biogas produced in the methane digester is primarily methane and carbon dioxide, with traces of hydrogen sulfide, and other gasses. Biogas by itself can be used as-is for heating and for cooking. However, use of raw biogas in heating equipment and in internal combustion engines will cause early failures because of the corrosive nature of the hydrogen sulfide and water vapor. Carbon dioxide in the biogas lowers the heating value of the gas. It should be noted that the biogas from the digestion of animal wastes does not have some of the contaminants of biogas from landfills or municipal waste water treatment plants and is therefore easier to clean up.
Hydrogen sulfide is corrosive and smelly. It can be removed from the biogas by injecting less than six percent volume of air into the biogas in the gas reservoir, by adding iron chloride to the digester influent stream, or by flowing the biogas through wood chips impregnated with iron oxide (iron sponge) or through activated carbon. Carbon dioxide can be removed by bubbling the biogas though water in a vertical column packed-bed scrubber. Finally, moisture can be removed by flowing the biogas through a refrigerated coil. )

Risks Associated with Biogas

While methane is a very promising energy resource, the non-methane components of biogas (hydrogen sulfide, carbon dioxide, and water vapor) tend to inhibit methane production and, with the exception of the water vapor, are harmful to humans and/or the environment. For these reasons, the biogas produced should be properly "cleaned" using appropriate scrubbing and separation techniques.
In addition, the methane itself represents a serious danger, as it is odorless, colorless, and difficult to detect. Methane is also highly explosive if allowed to come into contact with atmospheric air at proportions of 6 to 15 percent methane. For these reasons, it is recommended that buildings be well ventilated; motors, wiring, and lights should be explosion-proof; flame arrestors should be used on gas lines; and alarms and gas-detection devices should be used.

Digester Design Factors

Digesters are installed primarily for economic and/or environmental reasons. Digesters represent a way for the farmer to convert a waste product into an economic asset, while simultaneously solving an environmental problem. Under ideal conditions, an anaerobic-digestion system can convert a livestock operation’s steady accumulation of manure into a fuel for heating or cooling a portion of the farm operation or for further conversion into electricity for sale to a utility. The solids remaining after the digestion process can be used as a soil amendment, applicable on-farm or made available for sale to other markets. Unfortunately, such ideal conditions seldom exist, in part because of faulty planning and design.
For anyone considering an anaerobic-digestion system, the single most important point to understand is that each farmer’s situation is unique, and as such, requires careful consideration of many factors. Anaerobic-digestion systems can be quite costly to install, so the owner should fully understand the purpose of the system and its economics.
The size of the system is determined primarily by the number and type of animals served by the operation, the amount of dilution water to be added, and the desired retention time. The most manageable of these factors is retention time; longer retention times mean more complete breakdown of the manure contents, but require a larger tank. Table 4, developed by North Carolina State University’s Cooperative Extension Service, presents one set of recommended loading rates and dilution ratios for different animals. Other sources provide similar yet different recommendations, underscoring the importance of working with an individual experienced in designing anaerobic-digestion systems.
Table 4. Energy Content of Biogas from Various Animals
 
Swine
(per head)
Swine
(per head)
Beef
(per head)
Poultry
(layers)
(per bird)
Design Criteria
Animal weight (lbs)
135
1,400
800
4
Total fresh manure & urine
(gal/day)
1.35
12.5
6.1
0.032
Solids content (%)
Before dilution
10.0
15.0
15.0
25.0
After dilution
6.7
8.0
8.0
8.0
Total waste volume after
dilution (gal/day)
2
24
12
0.1
Volatile solids production
(VS lbs/day)
1
12
5
0.038
Digester loading rate (lbs VS/ft3 digester/day)
0
0
0
0.125
Digester volume (ft3/head)
5
47
19
0.3
Retention time (days)
20
15
13
22.5
Probable VS destruction (%)
50
35
45
60
Anticipated Gas Yield
Yield (per ft3 digester volume)
1
1
1
1
Yield (ft3/head/day)
4
46
28
0.29
Gross energy content (Btu/head/day)
2,300
27,800
16,600
180
Net energy content (Btu/ head/day) (uses 35% of gross to operate digester)
1,500
18,000
10,700
110
Source: Barker, James C. 2001. Methane Fuel Gas from Livestock Wastes: A Summary. North Carolina State University Cooperative Extension Service, Publication #EBAE 071-80.
North Carolina State’s Extension Service goes on to provide several good examples (see Table 5) of how digester tank sizes can be computed using the information in Table 4.
Digesters must be airtight and situated so that they can be heated, usually with hot-water piping running in and out of the digester tank. It may be possible to heat the water using the methane produced by the digester. The tank should also be insulated to help it retain optimal operating temperatures. Many practitioners take advantage of the soil's insulating effect by at least partially burying the digester tank in a pit or piling the soil up against the tank’s sides.
Table 5. Configuring Digester Tank size
Example 1: 100 cow dairy herd
Fresh manure @ 15% solids
1,250 gal/day
Milk center wash water
500 gal/day
Dilution water required for 8% solids
600 gal/day
Total waste volume generated
2,350 gal/day
Digester retention time
15 days
Tank capacity (15 x 2,350)
32,250 gal
Suggestion: Round tank 18 ft. diam. x 18.5 ft. tall
 
Example 2: 200 sow farrow-to-finish operation
Fresh manure @ 10% solids
2,830 gal/day
Additional water from foggers, etc.
1,415 gal/day
Total waste volume generated
4,245 gal/day
Digester retention time
20 days
Tank capacity (20 x 4,245)
84,900 gal
Suggestion: Round tank 24 ft. diam. x 25 ft. tall
 
Example 3: 50,000 bird layer operation
Fresh manure @ 25% solids
1,620 gal/day
Dilution water required for 8% solids
3,440 gal/day
Total waste volume generated
5,060 gal/day
Digester retention time
22.5 days
Tank capacity (22.5 x 5,060)
113,850 gal
Suggestion: Round tank 7 ft. diam. x 26.5 ft. tall
 
Source: Barker, James C. 2001. Methane Fuel Gas from Livestock Wastes: A Summary. North Carolina State University Cooperative Extension Service, Publication #EBAE 071-80.
As noted previously, regular—but not necessarily continuous—mixing of the digester’s contents is important to maximize gas production. This mixing can be performed by a mechanical mixer; by a compressor, which bubbles the collected gas back through the digester; or by a closed-circuit manure pump. (6) Purdue University’s Cooperative Extension Service suggests that the mechanical mixer works well, as long as a good air seal is maintained. Purdue Extension also provides the following formula to determine the horsepower needed to mix the digester contents:
hp = .185 x % total solids x liquid capacity (in 000s of ft3)
As an example, a 10,000-ft3 digester containing waste with 6 percent solids would require an 11.1-hp mixer (.185 x 6% x 10).

System Costs

The cost of an anaerobic-digestion system can vary dramatically depending on its size, intended purposes, and sophistication. Covered lagoon system cost can be as low as $25,000 for 150 animals (swine) and as high as $1.3 million for 5,000 animals (dairy). Plug flow digesters range from $200,000 for 100 dairy cows, to $1.8 million for 7,000 dairy cows. (10)
These costs, of course, must be weighed against revenue streams developed with digestion’s by-products. In 1998, Mark Moser, Richard Mattocks, Stacy Gettier, PhD, and Kurt Roos—all highly regarded experts in the anaerobic-digester field— studied the economic returns of seven AgSTAR digester projects. Revenues came from electric generation, and sale of digested fiber for compost, and from reduced costs for natural gas and propane, as well as reduced bedding costs. Costs and annual revenues of four of these projects are available from the Minnesota Project. Of the remaining three projects, two were developed primarily for odor control rather than financial payback, and the third experienced problems that prevented it from realizing its expected revenues. (11)
The AgSTAR Program evaluators believe anaerobic digestion can be cost-competitive relative to conventional waste-management practices (e.g., storage tanks, storage ponds, lagoons). When the biogas produced by the system is put to work, digesters can reportedly have payback periods of three to seven years, substantially more attractive than the sunk costs typically associated with conventional approaches. (12)
Construction Costs and Annual Benefits
Barham
Farm
Covered
Lagoon
$289,474
$46,000
per/year
Martin
Family
Farm
Covered
Lagoon
$95,200
$16,000
per/year
Other digester case studies can be found at Cornell University's Manure Management Program.

Summary

Cow and calf.
Cow and calf.
Photo by Lynn Betts, courtesy of USDA/ARS.
Anaerobic digesters are installed for various reasons—as a means to resolve environmental problems, as a means to economically re-use an otherwise wasted resource, and as a source of additional revenue. All of these factors typically play a role in an owner’s decision to install a system.
If done right, however, this decision is not a simple one. It should involve careful planning and design, preferably with input from an engineering professional and/or someone well experienced with anaerobic-digestion systems. This planning process must consider a long list of factors.

Factors to Consider
  • The specific benefits to be derived

  • The number and kind of animals to be served

  • Where the system might be placed

  • How the manure and other inputs will be collected and delivered to the system

  • How the required temperatures will be maintained

  • How all the risks associated with the process, some of which are substantial, will be mitigated

  • How the outputs will be handled

  • The amount of monitoring and management time required

Assessment Resources

Because anaerobic digesters are expensive to install and manage, the above considerations and many others should be researched and then factored into an economic-feasibility assessment. A number of resources have been developed to guide a prospective system owner through this assessment process:
  • AgSTAR Program, the premier U.S. resource for information and assistance relating to methane digesters.

  • Manurenet, the leading Canadian resource that also includes projects and providers in the U.S. and other countries.

  • Various sources offer self-evaluation forms to estimate the potential of a successful digester system installation. The Cooperative Extension Service at Purdue University’s Department of Agricultural Engineering offers a complete evaluation with a full example of how it should be used. Though somewhat dated (published in 1980), the steps in the worksheet and most of the values used should still be valid. Only some of the dollar values, such as the current price of energy, will need to be updated. Another evaluation tool can be found at Environomics.

References

1. AgStar Digest. Winter 2006.
2. Environmental Protection Agency Methane Web Page
3. AgStar—Market Opportunities for Biogas Recovery Systems [PDF/3.05MB]
4. Hansen, R.W. 2001. Methane Generation from Livestock Wastes. Publication #5.002. Colorado State University Cooperative Extension Service. Ft. Collins, CO. 6 p.
5. AgStar Digest. Winter 2003.
6. Jones, Don D., John C. Nye, and Alvin C. Dale. 1980. Methane Generation from Livestock Waste. Publication #AE-105. Purdue University Cooperative Extension Service, West Lafayette, IN. 15 p.
7. Barker, James C. 2001. Methane Fuel Gas from Livestock Wastes: A Summary. Publication #EBAE 071-80. North Carolina State University Cooperative Extension Service,
Raleigh, NC. 10 p.
8. The Minnesota Project. Anaerobic Digester Systems for Mid-Sized Dairy Farms [PDF/739KB].
9. Sustainable Conservation. Biomethane from Dairy Waste: A sourcebook for the Production and Use of Renewable Natural Gas in California [PDF/315KB].
10. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Guide to Operational Systems [PDF/1.12MB]. AgSTAR Program. 4 p.
11. Moser, Mark A., Richard P. Mattocks, Dr. Stacy Gettier, and Kurt Roos. 1998. Benefits, Costs and Operating Experience at Seven New Agricultural Anaerobic Digesters [PDF/115KB]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 7 p.
12. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 2002. Managing Manure with Biogas Recovery Systems: Improved Performance at Competitive Costs [PDF/4.33MB]. 8 p.

Brief review of large biogas programs in India, Nepal, China and Africa.

Brief review of large biogas programs in India, Nepal, China and Africa.

There is a brief review of the history of biogas in India, Nepal and China in my new Kingdom Bioenergy Ltd website: (http://www.kingdombio.com). There are two very good projects in Africa as well, Rwanda and Ghana. The older information is based on my book: “Running a Biogas Programme: A Handbook” (1988), also available from Amazon (see review). The newer information is based on my visits for Ashden Awards in the past few years. See my own wikispace: http://kingdom-bioenergy.wikispaces.com/ for pictures.

The use of biogas technology fed with cattle dung to supply cooking fuel for rural families has been very successful in China (over 12 million working units), India (over 2 million units) and Nepal (over 172,000 units with a succes rate of 98% - still working 5 years after installation). In Rwanda, biogas has been used to process sewage from jails, with the benefit of a replacing 50% of the wood fuel used for cooking. In Ghana, BTWAL has built biogas plants to process sewage from hospitals, schools, universities and hotels.

The new approach in India is to process food wastes into biogas. Several groups are making plants that urban families can use to replace part of the LPG they use for cooking. More details are available on the Kingdom Bioenergy Ltd website. I am updating my book, which should be available by the Autumn of 2011, so the site is a trailer for the book.

Biogas Plant Design PDF Resources

Biogas Plant Design PDF Resources
  1. [PDF]
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
This information service on biogas technology has been developed and produced on ...... Normally, the biogas produced by a digester can be used as it is, ...
www.gtz.de/de/dokumente/en-biogas-volume1.pdf - Biogas bdf
  1. [PDF]
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
This information service on biogas technology has been developed and produced on the ...... Costs of a biogas bdf (production, running and capital costs) ...
www.gtz.de/de/dokumente/en-biogas-volume3.pdf - Biogas bdf
  1. [PDF]
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
biogas program, it is suggested that based on field information biogas cell is ... The first project of the GTZ concerning the biogas technology in Belize ...
www.gtz.de/de/dokumente/en-biogas-volume4.pdf - Biogas bdf
  1. [PDF]
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
This information service on biogas technology has been developed and ...... As a biogas unit is an expensive investment, it should not be erected as a ...
www.gtz.de/de/dokumente/en-biogas-volume2.pdf - Biogas bdf
  1. [PDF]
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
garden waste enter the digester and are broken down to biogas and fertile water. ... Simple Fixed-Dome Biogas Digester for Wastewater Treatment ...
www.gtz.de/en/.../en-sanitation-conference-technologies-costs-biogas.pdf
  1. [PDF]
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
Proposal for basic tariffs for electric power from biogas in Kenya. Basic-FiT ... Early mover bonus to accelerate development of biogas in Kenya ...
www.gtz.de/de/dokumente/gtz2010-en-biogas-assessment-kenya.pdf - Biogas bdf
  1. [PDF]
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
14 Jul 2010 ... is to provide an overview and introduction on biogas santation for blackwater, brown water, or for excreta treatment for reuse ...
www.gtz.de/en/.../gtz2010-en-technology-review-biogas-sanitation.pdf - Biogas bdf
  1. [PDF]
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
Biogas emissions during pre-treatment . ...
www.gtz.de/en/.../giz2011-en-technology-review-constructed-wetlands.pdf
  1. [PDF]
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
Where the liquid effluent from the biogas reactor can be used as fertiliser ... maintenance is available (leading countries for biogas ...
www.gtz.de/en/dokumente/gtz2010-en-biogas-sanitation-muench.pdf
  1. [PDF]
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
Small-scale Electricity Generation from Biomass - Part II: Biogas ... the utilisation of biogas for small and medium scale electricity generation in ...
www.gtz.de/.../gtz2010-en-small-scale-electricity-generation-from-biomass-part-2.pdf - Biogas bdf

Biogas Plants by Ludwig Sasse PDF

Biogas Plants by Ludwig Sasse




Content

Acknowledgments ................................................................................................ 1

Preface.................................................................................................................... 4

0.

Biogas as appropriate technology .............................................................. 5

1.

Benefits and costs of a biogas plant .......................................................... 7

2.

The digestion process.................................................................................. 9

3.

Biogas plants .............................................................................................. 12

4.

Scaling of biogas plants ............................................................................ 16

5.

Design of biogas plants ............................................................................. 28

6.

Biogas utilization ........................................................................................ 44

7.

Planning, design and construction ........................................................... 48

8.

Appendix ..................................................................................................... 57

Bibliography......................................................................................................... 64


Download Full E book (PDF)  Biogas Plants  by Ludwig Sasse

Review Of Bio-Gas Technology


Review Of Bio-Gas Technology 

 source: www.apo-tokyo.org

Download All chapters about Bio-gas:
 
GP Option for  Community Development   

Prepared for  Asian Productivity Organization
 
     
3.1 Bio-Gas Technology

Bio-gas technology is the  transformation of solid waste through anaerobic digestion process
to obtain bio-gas such as methane.



3.1.1 Process Microbiology

The biological conversion of the organic fraction of municipal solid waste under anaerobic
conditions is thought to occur in three steps.  The first step involves the enzyme-mediated
transformation (hydrolysis) of higher-molecular-mass compounds into compounds suitable
for use as a source of energy and cell tissue.  The second step involves the bacterial
conversion of the compounds resulting from the first step into identifiable lower-molecular-
mass intermediate compounds.  The third step  involves the bacterial conversion of these
intermediate compounds into simpler end products, principally methane and carbon dioxide.

In the anaerobic decomposition of wastes, a number of anaerobic organisms work together to
bring about the conversion of the organic portion of wastes into a stable end product.  One
group of organism is responsible for hydrolyzing organic polymers and lipids to basic
structural building blocks such as fatty acids, monosaccharides, amino acids, and related
compounds.  A second group of anaerobic bacteria ferments the breakdown products from the
first group to simple organic acids, the most common of which is acetic acid.  This second
group of microorganisms, described as nonmethanogenic, consists of facultative and obligate
anaerobic bacteria that are often identified in the literature as “acidogens” or “acid formers”.

A third group of microorganisms converts the hydrogen and acetic acid formed by the acid
formers to methane gas and carbon dioxide.  The bacteria responsible for this conversion are
strict anaerobes, called methanogenic, and are identified in the literature as “methanogens” or
“methane formers”.  Many methanogenic organisms identified in landfills and anaerobic
digesters are similar to those found in the stomachs of ruminant animals and in organic
sediments taken from lakes and river.  The most important bacteria of the methanogenic
group are the ones that utilize hydrogen and acetic acid.  They have very slow growth rates;
as a result, their metabolism is usually considered rate-limiting in the anaerobic treatment of
an organic waste.  Waste stabilization in anaerobic digestion is accomplished when methane
and carbon dioxide are produced.  Methane gas is highly insoluble, and its departure from a
landfill or solution represents actual waste stabilization.

3.1.2 Environmental Factors

To maintain an anaerobic treatment system that will stabilize an organic waste efficiently, the
nonmethanogenic and methanogenic bacteria must be in a state of dynamic equilibrium.  To
establish and maintain such a state, the reactor contents should be void of dissolved oxygen
and free of inhibitory concentrations of free ammonia and such constituents as heavy metals
and sulfides.  Also, the pH of the aqueous environment should range from 6.5 to 7.5.  As the 
methane bacteria cannot function below this point, sufficient alkalinity should be present to
ensure that the pH will not drop below 6.2.  When digestion is proceeding satisfactorily, the
alkalinity will normally range from 1000 to 5000 mg/L and the volatile fatty acids will be less
than 250 mg/L.  Values for alkalinity and volatile fatty acids in the high-solids anaerobic
digestion process can be as high as 12,000 and 700 mg/L, respectively.  A sufficient amount
of nutrients, such as nitrogen  and phosphorus, must also be available to ensure the proper
growth of the biological community.  Depending on the nature of the sludges or waste to be
digested, growth factors may also be required.  Temperature is another important
environmental parameter, with optimum temperature in the mesophilic, 30 to 38°C (85 to
100°F), and the thermophilic, 55 to 60°C (131 to 140°F) range.
 3.1.3 Gas Production

The general anaerobic transformation of solid waste can be described by means of the
following equation.

Organic matter + H2O + nutrients  → new cells + resistant organic matter + CO2 + CH4 + NH3
+ H2S + heat

3.1.4 Bio-Gas

Bio-gas is a gas generated from the anaerobic digestion of organic waste.  It consists of CH4
(50-70%), CO2 (30-50%) with the remaining gases being: H2, O2, H2S, N2 and water vapor. 
To ensure optimal Bio-gas production, the three groups  of micro-organisms must work
together.  In case of too much organic waste, the first and second groups of micro-organisms
will produce a lot of organic acid which will decrease the pH of the reactor, making it
unsuitable for the third group of  micro-organisms.  This will result in little or no gas
production. On the other hand, if too little organic waste is present, the rate of digestion by
micro-organisms will be minimal and production of Bio-gas will decrease significantly.
Mixing could aid digestion in the reactor but, too much mixing should be avoided as this
would reduce bio-gas generation.   Table 3.1 shows the amount of bio-gas generated from
animal waste and agriculture residue.
Table 3.1  Amount of bio-gas generated from animal waste and agriculture residue

animal  gas produced
L/kg-solid
Pig
Cow
Chicken
Horse
Sheep
Straw
Grasses
Peanut shell
Water Hyacinth
340-550
90-310
310-620
200-300
90-310
105
280-550
365
375


3.1.5  Factor Affecting Gas Generation

To ensure a constant generation of gas, the following factors should be considered :
•  Organic waste should be sufficient at all time.
•  Daily input of waste should conform with reactor size.  Too much input will reduce the
gas generation rate.
•  Digestion period (retention time) should be about 60-80 days

    Digestion period = 
 waste of input  Daily
reactor   of   Volume


•  pH within reactor should be about 7.0-8.5. Too low a pH will inhibit gas production.

3.1.6  Benefit of Bio-Gas Technology

The following benefits will be obtained from bio-gas technology:

• Energy
Bio-gas could be used as a fuel alternative to wood, oil, LPG and electricity.

• Agriculture use
Sludge from the bio-gas reactor could be used as compost.  Organic nitrogen from waste will
be transformed into ammonia nitrogen, a form of nitrogen which plants can uptake easily.

• Protect environment
Using bio-gas technology on animal waste treatment will reduce risk of infection from
parasite and pathogenic bacteria inherent in the waste.  Odor and flies will be significantly
reduced in the area, and water pollution created by the dumping of  waste can also be
prevented.
_-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Introduction

Before Building Anything!

Biogas Notes 652Kb Introduction to biogas

What Biogas Can Do For You



Biogas Design  

Mega Biogas Compilation 42Mb

2 Designs for Methane Digesters For Fuel Gas and Fertilizer 43.3Mb  (168 pages)

Anaerobic Digester Calculator  calculator to assist with your design

ARTI Biogas System 287Kb How to build

Balaji Biogas Plant  264Kb Short article on Indian style concrete digester made with steel mould.

Biogas and Waste Recycling - The Philippine experience 13Mb

Biogas Plants UN-ECDC  18.6Mb (270 pages very informative)

Biogas Sanitation 4.5Mb

Biogas: Community Development 2.3Mb

Biogas Utilization Handbook 3.9mb

Biogas Cogeneration Manual 12.7Mb (over 300 pages)

Biogas Plants - Ludwig Sasse 1.1Mb (detailed)

Biogas Systems in India 11.9Mb

Compost, Fertilizer and Biogas Production from Human and farm Waste in China 8Mb 

Design of a Biogas Digester 231Kb

Digester Basic Design and Theory 114Kb

FAO Biogas 1 516Kb

FAO Biogas 2 494Kb

FarmWare -  Link to FarmWare which is an analytical tool designed to provide a preliminary assessment on the benefits of integrating anaerobic digestion into an existing or planned dairy or swine manure management system.

Fuel Gas From Cow Dung 8.8Mb

Nepal Biogas Plant  630Kb

Peace Corps - Biogas 1.5Mb

Planning and Construction of Biomass Plants 97Kb

Planning - Steps To Take 59Kb

Plastic Tube Biodigester Installation Manual 605Kb

Polyethylene Tube Biodigesters 331Kb

Polyethylene Biogas Dome 540Kb

Purification of Biogas - 410Kb Removing hydrogen sulphide from biogas

Selecting and Sizing Biogas Units 546Kb

Understanding Biogas 252Kb



Biogas Plant Construction

Running a Biogas Programme: Handbook 18.2Mb

  School Projects

Build Your Own Biogas Generator 722Kb - short extract

Methane Biogas Production 497Kb



  Home Size Plants

2 Designs for Methane Digesters For Fuel Gas and Fertilizer 43.3Mb  (168 pages)

3 Cubic Meter Plant 722Kb

ARTI Biogas System 94kb (Indian home system)

ARTI Biogas System 287Kb How to build

Basic Small Scale Drum Plan 1.1Mb

Biogas Digesters in India 773K

Biogas Digest 1.94Mb  (80 pages very informative)

Biogas Plants UN-ECDC  18.6Mb 270 pages very informative

Biogas Digester Installation Manual  924Kb Plastic tube digester

Chinese Biogas Digester 2.3Mb

Chinese Biogas Manual 12Mb

Compost, Fertilizer and Biogas Production from Human and farm Waste in China 8Mb  

Construction Manual for Rural Families 294Kb

Fuel Gas From Cow Dung 8.8Mb

Home Biogas Construction Photos 356Kb

Methane Biogas Production 497Kb

Low Cost Tubular Digester  1.1Mb

Low Cost Plastic Tube 29.9Mb A compedium of low cost solutions

Mini Biogas Plants For Households 1.2mb

Nepal Biogas Plant  630Kb

Polyethylene Tube Biodigesters 331Kb

Plastic Tube Biodigester Installation Manual 605Kb

PVC Biogas Digester 359Kb  Bladder type, successful

Small Homebuilt Digester Construction 775Kb

Village Size Plants

Biogas For Overseas Volunteers 123Kb

Biogas Systems in India 11.9Mb

Biogas Digesters in India 773Kb

Biogas: Community Development 2.3Mb

Biogas Plants - Ludwig Sasse 1.1Mb (detailed)

Biogas Unit - Developing Countries 1.1Mb

Biogas Utilization Handbook 3.9mb

Chinese Biogas Digester 2.3Mb

Chinese Biogas Manual 12Mb

Biogas Utilization Handbook 3.9mb

Mixed Flow Digesters 759Kb

Plug Flow Digesters 4.3Mb



Agriculture

agSTAR Biogas Handbook 3.4MB (The guide identifies the states with the greatest opportunity to cost effectively install and operate biogas recovery systems using dairy and swine manure.)

agSTAR Biogas Program  3.4Mb  (The program encourages in USA the use of biogas capture and utilization at animal feeding operations that manage manures as liquids and slurries.)

Agricultural Anaerobic Digestion 356kb

Biogas From Fish Farms 569Kb

Biogas Unit - Developing Countries 1.1Mb

Biogas at Vanith Farm 893Kb

Biomethane from Dairy Waste 4.1Mb

Biogas In Animal Husbandry  17.6 Mb (157 pages)

Colorado Technology Assessments 279Kb

Dairy Waste Anaerobic Digestion Handbook 1.2Mb

Farm Scale Biogas Plants 433 kb

Haubenschild Farms Digester 707Kb

Low Cost Biodigesters - small scale 316Kb

Pig Waste Management  25.3Mb  (322 pages)

Polyethylene Tube Biodigesters 331Kb

Rokel Pig Farm Demonstration 1.8Mb

Selecting and Sizing Biogas Units 546Kb

Wisconsin Biogas Casebook 2.3Mb



Case Studies

Biogas Digesters in India 773Kb

Biomethane from Dairy Waste 4.1Mb

Chinese Biogas Digester 2.3Mb

Dairy, Reinfold Farm 2Mb digester designed for 1,000 cows

Fixed Film Anaerobic Digester at Farber Farm: Case Study 

Haubenschild Farms Digester 707Kb

Wisconsin Biogas Casebook 2.3Mb 



Reports 

Biogas In Animal Husbandry  17.6 Mb (157 pages)

Biogas Technology in The 3rd World 14.7Mb

Biogas and Waste Recycling - The Philippine experience 13Mb

Cogeneration: A Worshop Manual  13.0Mb

Danish Centralised Biogas Plants 1.3Mb

Feasibility Study Domestic Biogas - Bangladesh 3.8Mb

IEA Biogas Technologies 1.3Mb

IEA Energy Crops 681Kb

Micro Turbine Power Generation 268Kb

Biogas Processes For Sustainable Development 1.30Mb

Market Opportunities for Biogas Recovery Systems 3.1Mb

Techno Economic Feasibility Report 465kb Indian Community Biogas

UNEP Converting Waste Agricultural Biomass Into A Resource 5.1Mb



Landfill Gas

Landfill Gas California 2.2Mb

Landfill Gas Handbook - International Solid Waste Association 1.9Mb

Landfill Gas Design, Construction, Operation - PowerPointPresentation 1.9Mb

Design Of Landfill Gas Systems - Power Point Presentation 5.8Mb

Landfill Gas Soils and Foundations Handbook 3.7Mb



Misc 

Chinese Biogas Manometer 69Kb

CO2 Content by Syringe Protocol 12Kb

Biogas as Vehicle Fuel 712Kb

Engines For Biogas 1.2Mb (132 pages detailed info)

Solar Gas Turbines 2.9mb

Biogas For Heat Recovery 1.0Mb

Biogas Production and Micro turbines 306Kb

Capstone C30 Biogas Turbine 167Kb

Purification of Biogas - 410Kb Removing hydrogen sulphide from biogas

Roman Engineering of Roads, Bridges, Tunnels - Power Point 26.3Mb
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...