Biogas MethaneBiogas methane is methane created from biologically created organic
matter. The important thing to remember is that the term has entered common usage through the need to distinguish
biogas derived methane from fossil fuel methane. Fossil fuel derived methane is methane from the term ‘natural
gas’. Natural gas comes from mineral reserves, stored in the ground from hundreds of thousands of years ago, and
sometimes from coal mines and coal measures which also emit methane.
So, in other words, biogas methane means ‘green’, ‘renewable’ methane, as opposed to natural gas which when burnt
contributes to the greenhouse effect.
In addition to the biogas methane energy sources usually talked about, there are others which are not mineral gas
created and these are either natural and un-natural in their origins, as follows:-
1. Biogas being created naturally all the time in peat bogs and organic marine silts;
2. Methane produced in the stomachs of animals by the digestion of their foods (eg ruminants);
3. Biogas being created in farm slurry tanks etc, while farmers hold it waiting for dry weather when they can
spread the manure/slurry on to their fields;
4. Landfill gas which is simply biogas created in landfills where the conditions are anaerobic.
Anaerobic decomposition in all these cases, produces methane biogas. At the same time it produces,
carbon dioxide, some hydrogen and other gases in traces, very little heat, and a final product with a higher
nitrogen content than is produced by aerobic fermentation.
The biogas production process which is usually inferred when people talk about methane biogas is anaerobic
Digestion which consists of feeding biomass to a large digester, where methane-producing bacteria, under anaerobic
conditions, convert it into the energy-rich biogas.
The action of mixing and heating with the digester allows the bacteria within the digester to come into contact
with the feedstock material, which provides food for the bacteria to multiply and convert the complex organic
compounds into much simpler mostly soluble compounds. For example, sugars and starches, which then react in further
stages resulting in methane gas which comprises about two thirds of biogas. The gas, a mixture of methane and
CO2, is used for direct combustion in cooking or lighting applications, or to power combustion engines for motive
power or electricity generation.
Methane biogas technology is a renewable energy technology that uses various forms of biomass (animal dung, crop
waste) and converts it into a useful energy source in the form of biogas (about 70% methane) via anaerobic
microbial digestion. Methanogens are organisms that make methane via a unique metabolic pathway with unique
enzymes. This produces a mixture of gases, primarily methane and carbon dioxide, and a nutrient-rich
slurry. The methane gas rises into the gas holder where it is contained by a water seal. When the
mixture of methane and air (oxygen) burn a blue flame is emitted, producing large amount of heat energy.
Methane biogas can be used for all the purposes in which natural gas is used, and can be used as the renewable
equivalent of LNG as well.
Methane biogas has in the past been more expensive to produce that simply drilling for natural gas and pumping vast
quantities of natural gas to our homes and industries. Methane biogas needs “scrubbing” before it is clean enough
to use in normal natural gas burning equipment. If it is not scrubbed, or not scrubbed adequately it will cause
corrosion.
Methane biogas is about to become much more important as an energy source than it has been in the past.
| Visit our main, web site for biogas information at the Anaerobic Digestion Community web site. OVER 100 PAGES of biogas digester information, training, videos, and resources for everyone from
casual enquirer, student/researcher, to biogas investor and industry professionals. |
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