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Energies
Article . 2018 . Peer-reviewed
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Energies
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Anaerobic Co-Digestion of Sludge and Organic Food Waste—Performance, Inhibition, and Impact on the Microbial Community

Authors: Alexander Keucken; Moshe Habagil; orcid Damien Batstone;
Damien Batstone
ORCID
Harvested from ORCID Public Data File

Damien Batstone in OpenAIRE
orcid Ulf Jeppsson;
Ulf Jeppsson
ORCID
Harvested from ORCID Public Data File

Ulf Jeppsson in OpenAIRE
orcid Magnus Arnell;
Magnus Arnell
ORCID
Harvested from ORCID Public Data File

Magnus Arnell in OpenAIRE

Anaerobic Co-Digestion of Sludge and Organic Food Waste—Performance, Inhibition, and Impact on the Microbial Community

Abstract

Anaerobic co-digestion allows for under-utilised digesters to increase biomethane production. The organic fraction of municipal solid waste (OFMSW), i.e., food waste, is an abundant substrate with high degradability and gas potential. This paper investigates the co-digestion of mixed sludge from wastewater treatment plants and OFMSW, through batch and continuous lab-scale experiments, modelling, and microbial population analysis. The results show a rapid adaptation of the process, and an increase of the biomethane production by 20% to 40%, when co-digesting mixed sludge with OFMSW at a ratio of 1:1, based on the volatile solids (VS) content. The introduction of OFMSW also has an impact on the microbial community. With 50% co-substrate and constant loading conditions (1 kg VS/m3/d) the methanogenic activity increases and adapts towards acetate degradation, while the community in the reference reactor, without a co-substrate, remains unaffected. An elevated load (2 kg VS/m3/d) increases the methanogenic activity in both reactors, but the composition of the methanogenic population remains constant for the reference reactor. The modelling shows that ammonium inhibition increases at elevated organic loads, and that intermittent feeding causes fluctuations in the digester performance, due to varying inhibition. The paper demonstrates how modelling can be used for designing feed strategies and experimental set-ups for anaerobic co-digestion.

Country
Australia
Keywords

anaerobic digestion, 2606 Control and Optimization, Technology, 670, Wastewater treatment, Co-digestion, 2102 Energy Engineering and Power Technology, Anaerobic digestion, Microbial community, co-digestion, mathematical modelling, Mathematical modelling, Sustainability and the Environment, 2208 Electrical and Electronic Engineering, T, Solid waste, 2105 Renewable Energy, 2101 Energy (miscellaneous), wastewater treatment, solid waste, microbial community

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