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Co-digestion of tanning residues and sludge

dc.contributor.authorDi Berardino, Santino
dc.contributor.authorMartinho, Alcino
dc.date.accessioned2010-04-07T15:48:07Z
dc.date.available2010-04-07T15:48:07Z
dc.date.issued2009-08-08
dc.description.abstractCodigestion experiments on sludge from tanneries’ industrial wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) mixed with chromium free (“green”) tanneries solid wastes were carried-out in a 15 m3 pilot plant reactor, operating at 20 days hydraulic retention time (HRT) and at mesophilic temperature (35 ºC). The goal was to evaluate the feasibility of a full-scale unit. Addition of “green” solid wastes improved biodegradability of the sludge and biogas production. The removal efficiencies of organic matter varied, according to the feedstock mixture. Averaged results are: COD and VS more than 55 %; TOC = 69 %. Hydrolysis of suspended volatile solids was initially moderate (36 %), but increased up to about 50 %, when the feedstock contained proteolytic enzymes. Fat removal was quite high (77 %). Biogas production was highly dependent from the fleshing content in the feedstock. Addition of 30 % by weight of fleshing to the sludge increased 4 times the average biogas production (from 3,85 m3/day to 14,62 m3/day). The maximum Biogas production rate was 38 liter/kg of feedstock. Fleshing biogas yield was found to be 630 l/kg Volatile Solids loaded, higher than the value recorded for the sludge (288 l/kg Volatile Solids loaded). Methane content in biogas was about 75 % CH4. The average biogas productivity of the reactor was 1.49 l/l/day. Sulphate removal carried-out by the biologic community (SO4 = ≥ 35%) increased Hydrogen sulphide concentration in the biogas up to 1800 ppm (average), a value higher than the limits allowed for use in internal combustion engines. Grinding and maceration of fleshing was hard, due to smell, repugnant look and high strength of its components. This feedstock must be pre-treated in order to avoid excess hydrogen sulphide and lime. Codigestion of “green” tannery wastes with sludge and others residues revealed technically feasible and a low cost solution for the environmental problem of these residues from small/average tanning factories. The potential biogas production for full scale plant is about 11 000 m3/day, making this solution refundable within 5 years. Codigestion allows substantial reduction in bio solids volume, pathogens, and odor, increasing landfill life. This is an important evolution on current solution and gives time to plan and implement new sustainable projects.pt
dc.identifier.citationDi Berardino, Santino; Martinho, Alcino.Co-digestion of tanning residues and sludge. In: 12th IWA Sludge Conference - Sustainable Management of Water & Wastewater Sludge, Harbin, China, August 8-10, 2009, 6p.pt
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10400.9/596
dc.language.isoengpt
dc.subjectAnaerobic co-digestionpt
dc.subjectBiogaspt
dc.subjectLeather industrypt
dc.subjectTaneriespt
dc.subjectSludgept
dc.subjectFleshingpt
dc.titleCo-digestion of tanning residues and sludgept
dc.typeconference object
dspace.entity.typePublication
oaire.citation.conferencePlaceHarbin, Chinapt
oaire.citation.title12th IWA Sludge Conference - Sustainable Management of Water & Wastewater Sludgept
person.familyNameDi Berardino
person.givenNameSantino
person.identifier.orcid0000-0002-1286-4178
person.identifier.ridP-4062-2015
person.identifier.scopus-author-id55188504700
rcaap.rightsopenAccesspt
rcaap.typeconferenceObjectpt
relation.isAuthorOfPublication5b05d792-bc63-4b68-98ee-540c213f19ff
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscovery5b05d792-bc63-4b68-98ee-540c213f19ff

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