4.6 Article

Differential Effect of Anaerobic Digestion on Gaseous Products from Sequential Pyrolysis of Three Organic Solid Wastes

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 6, Issue 34, Pages 22103-22113

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.1c02678

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Shanghai Committee of Science and Technology [19DZ1204702]
  2. National Natural Scientific Foundation of China [52070126]
  3. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFC1903201]
  4. Program of Shanghai Technology Research Leader Grant [17XD1420500]

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The study shows that anaerobic digestion has varying effects on the gas composition of syngas produced from different organic solid wastes, resulting in changes in the amounts of C, N, and S-containing gases. These findings provide a theoretical foundation for the environmentally-friendly application of syngas from digestates.
Studies have shown that anaerobic digestion (AD) has an effect on the liquid and solid product property of sequential pyrolysis, but its influence on the gaseous products is lacking. In this study, syngas produced by pyrolysis from three raw organic solid wastes and the corresponding digestates, i.e., food waste, vinasse, and cow manure were investigated. AD causes a decrease in the contents of volatile solid, fixed carbon, C, H, and N and an increase in the S content. The weight loss of the wastes mainly occurs at 200-550 degrees C during the pyrolysis and the loss of the food waste and vinasse is higher than that of cow manure. In the carbon (C)-containing gas, AD leads to a decrease in the CH4 content of the syngas, implying that the heat values of the digestates are lower than that of the raw substrates. After AD, the total amount of nitrogen (N)-containing gas from the vinasse increases by 40.1%, while that from cow manure decreases by 14.1%. On the contrary, the total amount of sulfur (S)-containing groups in the syngas from vinasse drop by 22.0%, while that from cow manure increases by 9.1%. In addition, slight changes in the C-, N-, and S-containing gases are found from food waste. The results indicate that AD has a different effect on the N- and S- containing gaseous groups from different organic solid wastes, and the mechanisms deserve further investigation. The findings supply a theoretical foundation for environmental-friendly application of syngas from the digestates.

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