Difference between revisions of "Anaerobic digestion"

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In a digestion process, organic matter from human, animal or vegetable waste is broken down by microbiological activity, in the absence of air. This anaerobic process produces a combustible gas, methane, a source of (biogas) energy. The digestion process takes a couple of weeks to a couple of months after which the remaining slurry can be removed, either continuously or batch-wise. Several options are available, ranging from simple digestion techniques to technologically complex designs on a household or municipal scale. A domestic anaerobic digestion technique `fixed dome type' consists of a simple biogas tank with a flat bottom and a round chamber covered with a dome shaped concrete gasholder. The gas is captured in the upper part of the digester. Gas pressure increases with the volume of gas stored, pushing the slurry into a separate outlet tank (see illustration).  
 
In a digestion process, organic matter from human, animal or vegetable waste is broken down by microbiological activity, in the absence of air. This anaerobic process produces a combustible gas, methane, a source of (biogas) energy. The digestion process takes a couple of weeks to a couple of months after which the remaining slurry can be removed, either continuously or batch-wise. Several options are available, ranging from simple digestion techniques to technologically complex designs on a household or municipal scale. A domestic anaerobic digestion technique `fixed dome type' consists of a simple biogas tank with a flat bottom and a round chamber covered with a dome shaped concrete gasholder. The gas is captured in the upper part of the digester. Gas pressure increases with the volume of gas stored, pushing the slurry into a separate outlet tank (see illustration).  

Revision as of 15:02, 18 July 2008

Anaerobic digestion icon.jpg

In a digestion process, organic matter from human, animal or vegetable waste is broken down by microbiological activity, in the absence of air. This anaerobic process produces a combustible gas, methane, a source of (biogas) energy. The digestion process takes a couple of weeks to a couple of months after which the remaining slurry can be removed, either continuously or batch-wise. Several options are available, ranging from simple digestion techniques to technologically complex designs on a household or municipal scale. A domestic anaerobic digestion technique `fixed dome type' consists of a simple biogas tank with a flat bottom and a round chamber covered with a dome shaped concrete gasholder. The gas is captured in the upper part of the digester. Gas pressure increases with the volume of gas stored, pushing the slurry into a separate outlet tank (see illustration).

Dry toilet, in Vietnam (for credits, click the picture)
Advantages Disadvantages
Excreta `out of sight'.

Net production of clean renewable biogas.
Elimination of visual contaminants (e.g. toilet paper).
Low need for operational control and maintenance.

Gas safety risk.

Slurry from digesters has to be removed and treated.
Insufficient pathogen removal without appropriate post treatment of sludge.

Costs

  • Investment costs vary greatly depending on the overall plant concept. Costs for biogas production increase with decreasing climatic temperatures. Life expectancy ranges from about 20 - 25 years.
  • Investment domestic biogas plant in Nepal, (fixed dome types from 4-20m³) US$ 300 ­ 400.
  • Maintenance costs (8m³ digester) US$ 5.50 ­ US$ 8.50 per year.
  • Operational costs - Negligible.

Applying conditions

  • Digesters are best suited to warm climates.
  • They are most appropriate in rural areas where animal manure can be added to the process.
  • The digestion process is sensitive to both temperature and materials. Both need to be controlled.
  • Relatively high skills are needed for construction. Operation and maintenance, however, are simple for batch systems.

External links