Published January 1, 2012 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Trace element requirements for stable food waste digestion at elevated ammonia concentrations

  • 1. Faculty of Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK

Description

The work investigated why anaerobic digesters treating food waste and operating at high ammonia concentrations suffer from propionic acid accumulation which may result in process failure. The results showed deficiency of selenium, essential for both propionate oxidation and syntrophic hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis, leads to this while supplementation allows operation at substantially higher organic loading rates (OLR). At high loadings cobalt also becomes limiting, due to its role either in acetate oxidation in a reverse Wood-Ljungdahl pathway or in hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis. Population structure analysis using fluorescent in-situ hybridisation showed only hydrogenotrophic methanogens. Critical Se and Co concentrations were established as 0.16 and 0.22 mg kg-1 fresh matter feed at moderate loading. At this dosage the OLR could be raised to 5 g VS l-1 day-1 giving specific and volumetric biogas productions of 0.75 m3 kg-1 VSadded and 3.75 STP m3 m-3 day-1, representing a significant increase in process performance and operational stability.

Notes

This is a revised personal version of the text of the final journal article, which is made available for scholarly purposes only, in accordance with the journal's author permissions.

Files

Banks et al TE and ammonia 2012 - scholar text.pdf

Files (1.1 MB)

Additional details

Funding

VALORGAS – Valorisation of food waste to biogas 241334
European Commission