4.5 Article

Anaerobic co-digestion of dairy manure with mulched switchgrass for improvement of the methane yield

Journal

BIOPROCESS AND BIOSYSTEMS ENGINEERING
Volume 35, Issue 3, Pages 341-349

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00449-011-0572-5

Keywords

Anaerobic digestion; Switchgrass; Panicum vergatum; Digester; Methane

Funding

  1. AAFC-NRCan-NRC
  2. ecoENERGY Technology Initiative from Natural Resources Canada

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The owners of farm-scale anaerobic digesters are relying on off-farm wastes or energy crops as a co-digestion feedstock with animal manure in order to increase their production of methane and thus revenues. Switchgrass represents an interesting feedstock for Canadian digesters owners as it is a high-yielding low-maintenance perennial crop, well adapted to northern climate. Methane potential assays in batch tests showed methane production of 19.4 +/- A 3.6, 28.3 +/- A 1.7, 37.3 +/- A 7.1 and 45.7 +/- A 0.8 L kg(-1), for raw manure, blended manure, manure and mulched switchgrass, manure and pretreated switchgrass, respectively. Two 6-L lab-scale anaerobic digesters were operated for 130 days in order to assess the benefit of co-digesting switchgrass with bovine manure (digester #2), at a 20% wet mass fraction, compared with a manure-only operation (digester #1) The digesters were operated at an hydraulic retention time of 37 +/- A 6 days and at loads of 2.4 +/- A 0.6 and 2.6 +/- A 0.6 kg total volatile solids (TVS) L-1 day(-1) for digesters #1 (D1) and #2 (D2), respectively. The TVS degradation reached 25 and 39%, which resulted in a methane production of 1.18 +/- A 0.18 and 2.19 +/- A 0.31 L day(-1) for D1 and D2, respectively. The addition of 20% on a wet mass ratio of switchgrass to a manure digester increased its methane production by 86%. The co-digestion of switchgrass in a 500 m(3) manure digester could yield up to 10.2 GJ day(-1) of purified methane or 1.1 MWh day(-1) of electricity.

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