In the framework of the waste circular economy, anaerobic digestion (AD) is a promising treatment option, due to both renewable energy and fertilizer production. Nevertheless, in mesophilic conditions a part of the organic carbon fed is not degraded, reducing the possibility to fully exploit the waste energy potential, and opening the research to advanced processes that can increase AD efficiency. In this study, AD of food waste was investigated in thermophilic conditions. Scope of this work was to evaluate the efficiency of a mild thermal pre-treatment on the solubilisation of complex organics and the digestion enhancement potential in terms of H2 and CH4 conversion rates. Thermal pre-treatment promoted complex organics solubilisation (soluble COD up to +40%) in particular with reference to starch and hemi-cellulose fraction. The high amount of released sugars was rapidly transformed into H2 in the first hours of AD, with high yields (up to 2.6 mol H2/mol glucose) and significant gain with respect to untreated waste. Ultimate methane yield was not affected by the substrate pre-treatment, but the positive impact was shown by the increase in anaerobic biodegradability, and kinetics.

Conversion of food waste into energy: Impact of thermal pre-treatment on hydrogen and methane production

Gallipoli A;Braguglia CM;Gianico A;Montecchio D;Pastore C;
2017

Abstract

In the framework of the waste circular economy, anaerobic digestion (AD) is a promising treatment option, due to both renewable energy and fertilizer production. Nevertheless, in mesophilic conditions a part of the organic carbon fed is not degraded, reducing the possibility to fully exploit the waste energy potential, and opening the research to advanced processes that can increase AD efficiency. In this study, AD of food waste was investigated in thermophilic conditions. Scope of this work was to evaluate the efficiency of a mild thermal pre-treatment on the solubilisation of complex organics and the digestion enhancement potential in terms of H2 and CH4 conversion rates. Thermal pre-treatment promoted complex organics solubilisation (soluble COD up to +40%) in particular with reference to starch and hemi-cellulose fraction. The high amount of released sugars was rapidly transformed into H2 in the first hours of AD, with high yields (up to 2.6 mol H2/mol glucose) and significant gain with respect to untreated waste. Ultimate methane yield was not affected by the substrate pre-treatment, but the positive impact was shown by the increase in anaerobic biodegradability, and kinetics.
2017
Istituto di Ricerca Sulle Acque - IRSA
Inglese
Proceedings of 25th European Biomass Conference and Exhibition
European Biomass Conference and Exhibition
2017
926
931
978-88-89407-17-2
http://www.scopus.com/record/display.url?eid=2-s2.0-85043760211&origin=inward
12-15/06/2017
Stockholm
anaerobic digestion
hydrogen
methane
modelling
organic waste
pretreatment
pretreatment
pretreatment
pretreatment
hydrogen
methane
methane
5
none
Gallipoli A.; Braguglia C.M.; Di Carlo M.; Gianico A.; Montecchio D.; Pagliaccia P.; Pastore C.; Gironi F.
273
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
04 Contributo in convegno::04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/395816
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