Env506 W7 - Biological
Env506 W7 - Biological
Env506 W7 - Biological
MANAGEMENT
BIOLOGICAL TREATMENT :
COMPOSTING/ANAEROBIC DIGESTION
a) Waste material
I. Quantity & composition of waste
II. Type of waste
III. Collection of waste
IV. Pre-treatment required
V. Cost of bulking material
VI. Transport of raw waste to plant
VII. Transport of compost
VIII. Disposal of non compostable materials
IX. Marketing possibilities
X. Alternative disposal options
XI. Presence of toxic / hazardous material
b) Compost plant
i. Location of plant
ii. Capital & equipment costs
iii. Land requirement
iv. Site development
v. Expansion possibilities
vi. Applicability of existing types
c) Compost process
i. System required
ii. Choice of equipment
iii. Energy/fuel requirements
iv. Laboratory needs
v. Maintenance needs
vi. Maintenance costs
vii. Personnel costs
d) Compost demand
i. Market research
ii. Market promotion
iii. Marketing costs
Advantages of composting
.
INTRODUCTION
Biogas
• Biogas is composed of methane (CH4), which is the primary
component of natural gas, at a relatively high percentage (50 to 75
percent), carbon dioxide (CO2), hydrogen sulfide (H2S), water vapor,
and trace amounts of other gases.
• The energy in biogas can be used like natural gas to provide heat,
generate electricity, and power cooling systems, among other uses.
Biogas can also be purified by removing the inert or low-value
constituents (CO2, water, H2S, etc.) to generate renewable natural
gas (RNG).
• This can be sold and injected into the natural gas distribution system,
compressed and used as vehicle fuel, or processed further to
generate alternative transportation fuel, energy products, or other
advanced biochemicals and bioproducts.
Digestate
• Digestate is the residual material left after the digestion process.
• It is composed of liquid and solid portions.
• These are often separated and handled independently, as each have value that can be
realized with varying degrees of post processing.
• With appropriate treatment, both the solid and liquid portions of digestate can be used in
many beneficial applications, such as animal bedding (solids), nutrient-rich fertilizer
(liquids and solids), a foundation material for bio-based products (e.g., bioplastics),
organic-rich compost (solids), and/or simply as soil amendment (solids), the latter of
which may include the farm spreading the digestate on the field as fertilizer.
• Digestate products can be a source of revenue or cost savings, and are often pursued to
increase the financial and net-environmental benefit of an AD/biogas project.
Heat
Heat, generated from the combustion of the methane gas, can be captured and put to use as
either steam or hot water.
REFERENCES
References
Van Lier, J. B., Mahmoud, N., & Zeeman, G. (2008). Anaerobic wastewater treatment. Biological
wastewater treatment: principles, modelling and design, 415-456.
Chernicharo, C. A. L., Van Lier, J. B., Noyola, A., & Ribeiro, T. B. (2015). Anaerobic sewage
treatment: state of the art, constraints and challenges. Reviews in Environmental Science and
Bio/Technology, 14(4), 649-679.
Thank you.