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Anaerobic digestion of secondary residuals from an anaerobic bioreactor at a brewery to enhance bioenergy generation
Authors:Benjamin T. Bocher  Matthew T. Agler  Marcelo L. Garcia  Allen R. Beers  Largus T. Angenent
Affiliation:(1) Department of Energy, Environmental and Chemical Engineering, Washington University in St Louis, One Brookings Drive, Campus Box 1180, St Louis, MO 63130, USA;(2) Anheuser-Busch, Inc., One Busch Plaza, St Louis, MO 63118, USA
Abstract:Many beer breweries use high-rate anaerobic digestion (AD) systems to treat their soluble high-strength wastewater. Biogas from these AD systems is used to offset nonrenewable energy utilization in the brewery. With increasing nonrenewable energy costs, interest has mounted to also digest secondary residuals from the high-rate digester effluent, which consists of yeast cells, bacteria, methanogens, and small (hemi)cellulosic particles. Mesophilic (37 °C) and thermophilic (55 °C) lab-scale, low-rate continuously-stirred anaerobic digestion (CSAD) bioreactors were operated for 258 days by feeding secondary residuals at a volatile solids (VS) concentration of ∼40 g l−1. At a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 15 days and a VS loading rate of 2.7 g VS l−1 day−1, the mesophilic bioreactor showed an average specific volumetric biogas production rate of 0.88 l CH4 l−1 day−1 and an effluent VS concentration of 22.2 g VS l−1 (43.0% VS removal efficiency) while the thermophilic bioreactor displayed similar performances. The overall methane yield for both systems was 0.21 l CH4 g−1 VS fed and 0.47–0.48 l CH4 g−1 VS removed. A primary limitation of thermophilic digestion of this protein-rich waste is the inhibition of methanogens due to higher nondissociated (free) ammonia (NH3) concentrations under similar total ammonium (NH4 +) concentrations at equilibrium. Since thermophilic AD did not result in advantageous methane production rates or yields, mesophilic AD was, therefore, superior in treating secondary residuals from high-rate AD effluent. An additional digester to convert secondary residuals to methane may increase the total biogas generation at the brewery by 8% compared to just conventional high-rate digestion of brewery wastewater alone. JIMB-2008: BioEnergy—Special issue.
Keywords:Anaerobic digestion  Methane yield  Secondary residuals  Continuously-stirred anaerobic digestion  Bioenergy
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