Demirbas, A; Taylan, O; Kaya, D
Energy Sources. Part A. Recovery, Utilization, and Environmental Effects
ISSN: 1556-7036
EISSN: 1556-7230
Biogas is produced by anaerobic (oxygen free) digestion of organic materials such as sewage sludge, animal waste, and municipal solid wastes (MSW). As sustainable clean energy carrier biogas is an important source of energy in heat and electricity generation, it is one of the most promising renewable energy sources in the world. Biogas is produced from the anaerobic digestion (AD) of organic matter, such as manure, MSW, sewage sludge, biodegradable wastes, and agricultural slurry, under anaerobic conditions with the help of microorganism. Biogas is composed of methane (55-75%), carbon dioxide (25-45%), nitrogen (0-5%), hydrogen (0-1%), hydrogen sulfide (0-1%), and oxygen (0-2%). The sewage sludge contains mainly proteins, sugars, detergents, phenols, and lipids. Sewage sludge also includes toxic and hazardous organic and inorganic pollutants sources. The digestion of municipal sewage sludge (MSS) occurs in three basic steps: acidogen, methanogens, and methanogens. During a 30-day digestion period, 80-85% of the biogas is produced in the first 15-18 days. Higher yields were observed within the temperature range of 30-60 degrees C and pH range of 5.5-8.5. The MSS contains low nitrogen and has carbon-to-nitrogen (C/N) ratios of around 40-70. The optimal C/N ratio for the AD should be between 25 and 35. C/N ratio of sludge in small-scale sewage plants is often low, so nitrogen can be added in an inorganic form (ammonia or in organic form) such as livestock manure, urea, or food wastes. Potential production capacity of a biogas plant with a digestion chamber size of 500 m(3) was estimated as 20-36 x 10(3) Nm(3) biogas production per year.