Improved Anaerobic Digestion by a Thermal Pretreatment

The experimental study was conducted in order to evaluate the effects of thermal pre-treatment of secondary sludge on anaerobic digestion using as substrate a dairy discharge consisting primarily of whey (Numidia Constantine) made up mainly of lactoserum. The inoculums was subjected to heat treatmen...

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Main Authors: K. Bani, K. Debal, M. Bencheikh-Lehocine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2016-09-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/3635
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spelling doaj-8004d212549a4602bdc95aa50f67be872021-02-19T20:59:20ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162016-09-015310.3303/CET1653050Improved Anaerobic Digestion by a Thermal PretreatmentK. BaniK. DebalM. Bencheikh-LehocineThe experimental study was conducted in order to evaluate the effects of thermal pre-treatment of secondary sludge on anaerobic digestion using as substrate a dairy discharge consisting primarily of whey (Numidia Constantine) made up mainly of lactoserum. The inoculums was subjected to heat treatment 120 °C, 160 °C, 180 °C for 2 hours, while considering the mud without treatment with a corresponding temperature equal to 20 °C. The trials were conducted in a series of reactors of 250 ml in thermophilic phase at 55 °C. The effect of heat treatment on the physicochemical parameters of the sludge before incubation shows that: In all cases, heat treatment brings about an important solubilisation of matter: The concentration in soluble matter greatly increases the required minimum time of treatment to achieve the highest rate of solubilisation which is equal to 60 min.The solubilisation of the CDO (Chemical Demand of Oxygen) increases proportionally with the treatment temperature. An increase in the treatment temperature of 120 °C results in a CDO with a solubilisation ratio of 7% and for a temperature of 180 °C it is 25%, with a solubilisation rate reaching 34% for a temperature of 18 °C. The best treatments (160 °C and 180 °C) result in a production of biogas from 2.7 to 3.5 times that of the untreated sludge for duration equal to 25 days.https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/3635
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K. Bani
K. Debal
M. Bencheikh-Lehocine
spellingShingle K. Bani
K. Debal
M. Bencheikh-Lehocine
Improved Anaerobic Digestion by a Thermal Pretreatment
Chemical Engineering Transactions
author_facet K. Bani
K. Debal
M. Bencheikh-Lehocine
author_sort K. Bani
title Improved Anaerobic Digestion by a Thermal Pretreatment
title_short Improved Anaerobic Digestion by a Thermal Pretreatment
title_full Improved Anaerobic Digestion by a Thermal Pretreatment
title_fullStr Improved Anaerobic Digestion by a Thermal Pretreatment
title_full_unstemmed Improved Anaerobic Digestion by a Thermal Pretreatment
title_sort improved anaerobic digestion by a thermal pretreatment
publisher AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
series Chemical Engineering Transactions
issn 2283-9216
publishDate 2016-09-01
description The experimental study was conducted in order to evaluate the effects of thermal pre-treatment of secondary sludge on anaerobic digestion using as substrate a dairy discharge consisting primarily of whey (Numidia Constantine) made up mainly of lactoserum. The inoculums was subjected to heat treatment 120 °C, 160 °C, 180 °C for 2 hours, while considering the mud without treatment with a corresponding temperature equal to 20 °C. The trials were conducted in a series of reactors of 250 ml in thermophilic phase at 55 °C. The effect of heat treatment on the physicochemical parameters of the sludge before incubation shows that: In all cases, heat treatment brings about an important solubilisation of matter: The concentration in soluble matter greatly increases the required minimum time of treatment to achieve the highest rate of solubilisation which is equal to 60 min.The solubilisation of the CDO (Chemical Demand of Oxygen) increases proportionally with the treatment temperature. An increase in the treatment temperature of 120 °C results in a CDO with a solubilisation ratio of 7% and for a temperature of 180 °C it is 25%, with a solubilisation rate reaching 34% for a temperature of 18 °C. The best treatments (160 °C and 180 °C) result in a production of biogas from 2.7 to 3.5 times that of the untreated sludge for duration equal to 25 days.
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/3635
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