4.5 Article

Full-stream and part-stream ultrasound treatment effect on sludge anaerobic digestion

Journal

WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 6, Pages 1363-1372

Publisher

IWA PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.2166/wst.2010.893

Keywords

anaerobic digestion; biogas; dewaterability; disintegration; part-stream; sludge; ultrasound

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Industria, Turismo y Comercio

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The use of ultrasound as pre-treatment to improve anaerobic digestion of secondary sludge has been established as a promising technology. There are great differences between lab scale and full-scale devices, regarding the relationship between the disintegration achieved and the energy supplied. Based on economic aspects, most of the full-scale plants use partial-stream instead of the full-stream sonication, which affects biogas production and digestate dewatering characteristics. A laboratory scale operation combining ultrasound and anaerobic digestion (batch tests) has been performed, determining the relationship between the ratio of sonicated sludge fed and the methane production, SCOD removal and capillary suction time after 20-day anaerobic biodegradation, in order to check the possible benefits of part-stream versus full-stream sonication. Additional incubation was also evaluated, searching for an optimum process combining ultrasound and 24-h incubation pretreatment. Results showed that by sonicating fresh WAS at 25,700 kJ/kg TS biogas yield increased linearly with the percentage of sonicated WAS in the substrate, from 248 (control reactor) to 349mL CH4/g VS (41% increase in full-stream sonication). By incubation (24 h, 55 degrees C), 325mL CH4/g VS were obtained (31% increase), but the digestion of the soluble compounds generated during incubation of sonicated sludge appeared to be less degradable compared to those solubilised by ultrasound or incubation alone, which showed no benefit in combining both treatments. Post-digestion dewatering deteriorated for both part-stream and full-stream sonication, and CST values were constant (74% higher than the control digestate) from 30% to 100% sonicated sludge.

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