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The effect of temperature variation on biomethanation at high altitude.

Alvarez, Rene LU and Lidén, Gunnar LU (2008) In Bioresource Technology 99. p.7278-7284
Abstract
The aim of the current study was to examine effects of daily temperature variations on the performance of anaerobic digestion. Forced square-wave temperature variations (between 11 and 25, 15 and 28, and 19 and 32 degrees C) were imposed on a bench-scale digester using a mixture of llama-cow-sheep manure in a semi-continuous process. The volumetric biogas production rate, methane yield, and the volatile solid reductions were compared with the results obtained from anaerobic digestion (AD) at constant temperatures. The forced cyclic variations of temperature caused large cyclic variations in the rate of gas production and the methane content. As much as 94-97% of the daily biogas was obtained in the 12h half-cycle at high temperature. The... (More)
The aim of the current study was to examine effects of daily temperature variations on the performance of anaerobic digestion. Forced square-wave temperature variations (between 11 and 25, 15 and 28, and 19 and 32 degrees C) were imposed on a bench-scale digester using a mixture of llama-cow-sheep manure in a semi-continuous process. The volumetric biogas production rate, methane yield, and the volatile solid reductions were compared with the results obtained from anaerobic digestion (AD) at constant temperatures. The forced cyclic variations of temperature caused large cyclic variations in the rate of gas production and the methane content. As much as 94-97% of the daily biogas was obtained in the 12h half-cycle at high temperature. The values for volumetric biogas production rate and methane yield increased at higher temperatures. The average volumetric biogas production rate for cyclic operation between 11 and 25 degrees C was 0.22Ld(-1)L(-1) with a yield of 0.07m(3)CH(4)kg(-1) VS added (VSadd), whereas for operation between 15 and 29 degrees C the volumetric biogas production rate increased by 25% (to 0.27Ld(-1)L(-1) with a yield of 0.08m(3)CH(4)kg(-1) VSadd). In the highest temperature region a further increase of 7% in biogas production was found and the methane yield was 0.089m(3)CH(4)kg(-1) VSadd. The employed digester showed an immediate response when the temperature was elevated, which indicates a well-maintained metabolic capacity of the methanogenic bacteria during the period of low temperature. Overall, periodic temperature variations appear to give less decrease in process performance than a priori anticipated. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Bioresource Technology
volume
99
pages
7278 - 7284
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • pmid:18262414
  • wos:000257367600067
  • scopus:44449125654
  • pmid:18262414
ISSN
1873-2976
DOI
10.1016/j.biortech.2007.12.055
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
9da23496-0ac0-4e29-95ac-745bd4449b03 (old id 1042107)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 14:05:00
date last changed
2023-12-11 23:59:02
@article{9da23496-0ac0-4e29-95ac-745bd4449b03,
  abstract     = {{The aim of the current study was to examine effects of daily temperature variations on the performance of anaerobic digestion. Forced square-wave temperature variations (between 11 and 25, 15 and 28, and 19 and 32 degrees C) were imposed on a bench-scale digester using a mixture of llama-cow-sheep manure in a semi-continuous process. The volumetric biogas production rate, methane yield, and the volatile solid reductions were compared with the results obtained from anaerobic digestion (AD) at constant temperatures. The forced cyclic variations of temperature caused large cyclic variations in the rate of gas production and the methane content. As much as 94-97% of the daily biogas was obtained in the 12h half-cycle at high temperature. The values for volumetric biogas production rate and methane yield increased at higher temperatures. The average volumetric biogas production rate for cyclic operation between 11 and 25 degrees C was 0.22Ld(-1)L(-1) with a yield of 0.07m(3)CH(4)kg(-1) VS added (VSadd), whereas for operation between 15 and 29 degrees C the volumetric biogas production rate increased by 25% (to 0.27Ld(-1)L(-1) with a yield of 0.08m(3)CH(4)kg(-1) VSadd). In the highest temperature region a further increase of 7% in biogas production was found and the methane yield was 0.089m(3)CH(4)kg(-1) VSadd. The employed digester showed an immediate response when the temperature was elevated, which indicates a well-maintained metabolic capacity of the methanogenic bacteria during the period of low temperature. Overall, periodic temperature variations appear to give less decrease in process performance than a priori anticipated.}},
  author       = {{Alvarez, Rene and Lidén, Gunnar}},
  issn         = {{1873-2976}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{7278--7284}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Bioresource Technology}},
  title        = {{The effect of temperature variation on biomethanation at high altitude.}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2007.12.055}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.biortech.2007.12.055}},
  volume       = {{99}},
  year         = {{2008}},
}