Dry anaerobic digestion of the fine particle fraction of mechanically-sorted organic fraction of municipal solid waste in laboratory and pilot reactor
Language English Country United States Media print-electronic
Document type Journal Article
PubMed
34653853
DOI
10.1016/j.wasman.2021.09.041
PII: S0956-053X(21)00533-X
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- Keywords
- Anaerobic digestion, Dry process, Horizontal tube reactor, Mechanically-separated OFMSW, Mesophilic,
- MeSH
- Anaerobiosis MeSH
- Bioreactors MeSH
- Laboratories MeSH
- Methane MeSH
- Refuse Disposal * MeSH
- Solid Waste * analysis MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Methane MeSH
- Solid Waste * MeSH
High-solid anaerobic digestion of the very small particle fraction of mechanically-sorted organic fraction of municipal solid waste (OFMSW) was examined in mesophilic digestion tests in a conventional laboratory (0.013 m3) and a pilot (0.300 m3) reactor. The non-biodegradable and recalcitrant molecules together with the low protein and starch contents of the small-particles of OFMSW limited the methane generation potential of substrate. In the conventional AD system, methane yields remained low at 0.139 m3kgVS-1 due to formation of a non-reacting layer on digestate surface, which restricted utilization of the available in OFMSW digestible organics. The absence of surface solid crust in the pilot unit favoured consumption of a greater proportion of volatile solids of the OFMSW. Dry AD was remarkably stable over the entire period and negligibly effected by the toxic H2S yields. Methane generation (0.167 m3kgVS-1) was increased 1.2-fold compared to the conventional system due to a better mixing of substrate and microorganisms achieved inside the pilot reactor, which led to an increase of the digested volatile organics. Digestate presented low stability and high heavy metal content, both of which restrain its implementation as soil conditioner or fertilizer in agriculture. A secondary co-digestion treatment may be required for the neutralization of digestate.
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