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Steam pressure disruption of municipal solid waste enhances anaerobic digestion kinetics and biogas yield
Author(s) -
Liu H. W.,
Walter H. K.,
Vogt G. M.,
Vogt H. S.,
Holbein B. E.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
biotechnology and bioengineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.136
H-Index - 189
eISSN - 1097-0290
pISSN - 0006-3592
DOI - 10.1002/bit.10130
Subject(s) - anaerobic digestion , biogas , cellulose , digestate , lignin , pulp and paper industry , chemistry , lignocellulosic biomass , methane , biomass (ecology) , waste management , steam explosion , biofuel , digestion (alchemy) , bioenergy , energy recovery , chromatography , agronomy , organic chemistry , engineering , biology , statistics , mathematics , energy (signal processing)
Biomass waste, including municipal solid waste (MSW), contains lignocellulosic‐containing fiber components that are not readily available as substrates for anaerobic digestion due to the physical shielding of cellulose imparted by the nondigestible lignin. Consequently, a substantial portion of the potentially available carbon is not converted to methane and the incompletely digested residues from anaerobic digestion generally require additional processing prior to their return to the environment. We investigated and developed steam pressure disruption as a treatment step to render lignocellulosic‐rich biomass more digestible and as a means for increasing methane energy recovery. The rapid depressurization after steam heating (240°C, 5 min.) of the nondigested residues following a 30‐day primary digestion of MSW caused a visible disruption of fibers and release of soluble organic components. The disrupted material, after reinoculation, provided a rapid burst in methane production at rates double those observed in the initial digestion. This secondary digestion proceeded without a lag phase in gas production, provided ∼40% additional methane yields, and was accompanied by a ∼40% increase in volatile solids reduction. The secondary digestate was found to be enriched in lignin and significantly depleted in cellulose and hemi‐cellulose components when compared to primary digestate. Thus, steam pressure disruption treatment rendered lignocellulosic substrates readily accessible to anaerobic digestion bacteria and improved both the kinetics of biogas production and the overall methane yield from MSW. Steam pressure disruption is central to a new anaerobic digestion process approach including sequential digestion stages and integrated energy recovery, to improve process yields, provide cogenerated energy for process needs, and to provide effective reuse and recycling of waste biomass materials. © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biotechnol Bioeng 77: 121–130, 2002.

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