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Digester Technology
Advances
Digestion Technology Developments For Cheaper Renewable
Fuel
A very
popular idea currently gaining publicity is a very old concept:
methane digestion. The methane given off during the
decomposition of the manure is captured and burned, providing
either heat or power, for electrical generation. These promise
a minor revolution in small and medium scale energy generation
from methane, with a scale smaller than wind turbines, but
still significant in terms of national adjustments to high oil
prices.
However, the digestion process has been
criticized for being inefficient and unstable in
operation. But, the technology of anaerobic digestion has
been largely ignored until the last run on oil prices
about 5 years ago (about 2003), when for the first time
for as long as anyone can remember the oil price exceeded
the production cost for fuel produced as methane by
digestion.
Five years has been scarcely long enough for more than some
half a dozen to one dozen AD plants to be designed, constructed
and commissioned, in the UK for example. These should be
considered to be a first generation of a new breed of reactors
using this technology. This is a bit like the people who
criticized the motor car for being slow while the law (in the
UK certainly) required all automobiles to be preceded by a man
holding a flag to warn pedestrians.
Many did criticize the automobile at that time, but do you
want to do so for digestion, as I think that you will be
looking as silly as those flag wavers were just ten years
later, when the motor car became an established mode of
transport.
There are many ways in which the efficiency of Anaerobic
Digestion bio-reactors are being improved, and the first is by
using sophisticated ultrasonic technology to break up the
particles and so allow breakdown of a bigger proportion of the
organic content.
In some of the other processes being developed the excess
liquor from the process is used to re-wet incoming biowaste as
it contains useful bacterial populations. This method can
produce a faster reaction then the original start-up.
It is important because on-farm Digester (Anaerobic
Digestion) projects can provide needed services to farmers;
develop local, renewable electrical generation; enhance
environmental quality; and generate income for the
community.
Other researchers have identified the fact that if you have
fluctuating temperatures, then you will not be able to
establish an optimum microbial population. The digester
stirring system must be efficient and operational at all times
to ensure that the cold, newly introduced sludge, is mixed with
the warm older solids and the bacteria. This sounds easy but in
a large tank with a fairly viscous sludge mass it can be
surprisingly onerous on the mixing technology.
Anaerobic digestion consists of a series of reactions which
are catalyzed by a mixed group of bacteria and through which
organic matter is converted in a step-wise fashion to methane
and carbon dioxide. Polymers such as cellulose, hemicellulose,
pectin, and starch are hydrolyzed to oligomers or monomers,
which are then metabolized by fermentative bacteria with the
production of hydrogen (H2), carbon dioxide (CO2), and volatile
organic acids such as acetate, propionate, and butyrate.
Clearly, this is a complex reaction which e can be greatly
improved by better knowledge gained by further academic study
which can now take place given the raised awareness and
importance of this technique. This will most likely yet result
in big advances in how man designs and runs its new
digesters.
In the developing world another angle for them is selling
carbon credits from the renewable energy created by anaerobic
digestion on the worldwide market. Those credits should be a
source of income for as well as providing a way to readily
obtain seed capital for these projects from the banks.
However, the process also produces a solid and a liquid
digestate in the slurry. The use of the process would not be
sustainable without an environmentally safe method of disposal,
and better still preferably a 'beneficial use' of the output
from digestion.
The market for the digestion processing outputs is still
undeveloped just about everywhere. However, there are some
positive signs reported that the outputs will be genuinely
useful, and indeed a source for additional revenue for the
operators of these plants.
The adoption of manure digesters at animal operations is
much more advanced in Europe than in the U.S. But, there are
many successful AD plants in operation throughout the U.S.
Northern Concrete has one such installation and has reported
on its digestion process. They have said that the feedstock
(animal byproduct) goes into a holding area until it is ready
to enter the digester. It sits in the digester for 22 days and
is released as useful by-products like methane and a grassy
sawdust-like product that can be used as fertilizer, animal
bedding or after further processing for floor boards.
There is certainly other evidence of progress in selling AD
outputs. Another operator (Pro-Gro Mixes of Tualatin, Ore.) is
thought to have contracted to market the solids material or
digested fiber to the wholesale nursery and landscape
industries, reportedly. It is understood to be selling between
1,000 to 3,000 yards of digested fiber, under the FiberLife
brand, per month in the Willamette Valley.
There is also potential for the methane to be burnt in
efficient turbines, rather than today's ubiquitous
reciprocating engines. Here the heat from turbine exhaust is
used to maintain the optimum digester temperature and sustain
bio-gas production. The resultant bio-gas is collected from one
such system and cleaned, then used to fire the turbines. The
results have reportedly been way above expectations, with a
significant increase in production, higher yield and fewer
rejects being recorded. The digester in question is thought to
qualify as a small-power production facility, which means it
follows a funding schedule, enabling projects to gain rapid
approval.
Digestion can be considered for a wide variety of
agricultural and industrial and commercial sites. From
agricultural community scale Digesters to
supermarkets with waste food, to municipal authorities with
organic waste in their collected waste streams. All should
now be considering the installation of digestion of one type
of another. For more information visit the Digestion web site.
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