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ANAEROBIC TREATMENT OF PIGGERY SLURRY

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Title: ANAEROBIC TREATMENT OF PIGGERY SLURRY


1
ANAEROBIC TREATMENT OF PIGGERY SLURRY
  • D. P. Chynoweth
  • A. C. Wilkie
  • J. M. Owens

2
SCOPE OF PRESENTATION
  • production of swine wastes
  • characteristics of swine wastes
  • environment impact
  • anaerobic processing options
  • residue use
  • biogas use
  • future trends

3
WORLD SWINE POPULATION BY REGION
4
GEOGRAPHIC PRODUCTION OF SWINE IN THE U.S.
5
WORLD SWINE WASTE PRODUCTION BY REGION
6
FUTURE TRENDS IN SWINE AND SWINE WASTE PRODUCTION
  • pork consumption is increasing in developing
    countries (especially in China and India)
  • piggeries are larger and more centralized, often
    gt1,000 -10,000
  • wastes exceed capacity for land disposal without
    several environmental impact

7
OVERVIEW OF SWINE PRODUCTION FACILITIES
8
OVERVIEW OF SWINE PRODUCTION FACILITIES
9
GLOBAL SWINE WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
10
TYPICAL BODY MASS AND WASTE PRODUCTION (per day
per 1000 kg)
11
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF SWINE WASTES
  • organic matter
  • inorganic nutrients
  • gases, dusts, and aerosols (health effects)
  • greenhouse gases
  • odors

12
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF ORGANIC MATTER
  • oxygen demand in receiving waters
  • untreated wastes attract pests when land applied
  • imbalanced anaerobic decomposition produces odors
  • decomposition releases greenhouse gases (CH4,
    CO2, NOx)

13
LAWS, REGULATION, AND POLICY (Clean Water Act)
  • addresses national air quality
  • concerned with point sources pollution
  • e.g., Category 1 applies to 2500 sine confined
    for 45 days per year requires NDPES permit
  • smaller systems may be required to use Best
    Available Technology (BAT) and Best Conventional
    Pollutant Control Technology (BCPCT)

14
LAWS, REGULATION, AND POLICY (Clean Air Act)
  • national air quality
  • methane, ammonia, dust

15
LAWS, REGULATION, AND POLICY (Coastal Zone Act
Reauthorization Amendments)
  • regulates animal operations in 35 coastal states
  • requires storage and treatment of wastewater and
    stormwater, waste treatment, and nutrient
    management
  • existing swine facilities under this act have
    100-200 head

16
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS
  • eutrophication of receiving waters
  • nitrates in groundwater (USEPA std. Is 10 mg/L)
  • ammonia may be toxic to aquatic organisms (USEPA
    std. is 0.02 mg/L)
  • N and P stimulate toxic algae blooms (e.g.
    Pfiesteria)
  • oxides of nitrogen cause acid rain and contribute
    to global warming

17
TOXIC ALGAE PFIESTERIA
  • toxic diatom
  • leathal to aquatic organisms
  • toxic to humans and other animals
  • caused by inorganic nutrients in brackish waters

18
HEALTH EFFECTS OF AEROSOLS
  • ammonia causes eye irritation, respiratory
    problems, and other illness (recommended level is
    10- ppm)
  • hydrogen sulfide odor is detectable at 0.005 ppm,
    causes nausea at 50-500 ppm, and is lethal at
    1000 ppm
  • pathogens include organisms that cause
    salmonellosis, Q fever, Newcastle disease,
    histoplasmosis, cryptosporidiosis, and gardiasis
  • allergies related to particulates in air

19
ODORS
  • a major problem with piggeries
  • affects animals, workers, and is a nuisance to
    nearby dwellings
  • causes by hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, and numerous
    organic compounds produced by imbalance anaerobic
    decomposition

20
ADVANTAGES OF ANAEROBIC DIGESTION
  • low energy requirements
  • less sludge production
  • low nutrient requirements
  • can handle loading variations (hydraulic and
    organic)
  • reduces pathogens
  • survives dormant periods
  • produces methane

21
POTENTIAL APPLICATIONS OF ANAEROBIC PROCESSING
FOR SWINE WASTES
  • flushed slurries
  • scraped solids
  • separated solids and slurries
  • biological nutrient removal
  • denitrification
  • phosphorus

22
PRINCIPAL REACTIONS OF BALANCED BIOMETHANOGENESIS
23
PRINCIPAL REACTIONS OF IMBALANCED METHANOGENESIS
24
SWINE WASTE CHARACTERISTICS FROM STORAGE TANKS
25
SWINE WASTE CHARACTERISTICS FROM
STORAGE/TREATMENT FACILITIES
26
ANAEROBIC DIGESTIBILITY OF SWINE WASTE
27
ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS OF ANAEROBIC DIGESTION
  • significantly reduces carbon dioxide and methane
    emissions
  • eliminates odors
  • produces sanitized compost and nutrient-rich
    fertilizer
  • maximizes recycling benefits

28
ENERGY BENEFITS OF ANAEROBIC DIGESTION
  • net energy producing process
  • generates high quality renewable fuel
  • biogas proven in numerous end-use applications

29
FACTORS INFLUENCING REACTOR DESIGN
  • chemical characteristics of feed
  • concentration of biodegradable matter
  • concentration of feed particulate solids
  • scale of application
  • continuity of feed availability
  • desired products
  • site

30
ANAEROBIC DIGESTER DESIGNS FOR DIFFERENT
FEEDSTOCKS
31
OPERATING PARAMETERS
  • loading rate
  • start-up
  • temperature
  • nutrients
  • mixing
  • inhibition

32
PERFORMANCE PARAMETERS
  • gas and methane yields and production rates
  • organic matter reduction (VS, COD)
  • organic acids, pH, alkalinity

33
PERFORMANCE PARAMETERS
34
ANAEROBIC DIGESTER DESIGNS
35
ANAEROBIC DIGESTER DESIGNS
36
ANAEROBIC DIGESTER DESIGNS (SBR)
37
ANAEROBIC LAGOON
38
BULK VOLUME FERMENTOR
39
CRITICAL CONCENTRATIONS OF INHIBITORS
40
EFFECT OF AMMONIA NITROGEN ON ANAEROBIC DIGESTION
41
RESIDUE USE CONSIDERATIONS
  • use as compost
  • high in inorganic nutrients
  • improves water retention
  • low odor levels
  • pathogens
  • mesophilic digestion gives poor reduction
  • thermophilic digestion give good reduction
  • best to maintain at 70oC for one hour
  • should cure prior to use as compost
  • removes volatile acids and sulfides
  • use for refeeding (solids contain 14 protein)

42
(No Transcript)
43
EFFLUENT TREATMENT (Goals)
  • organics (BOD)
  • odor
  • nutrients
  • pathogens

44
EFFLUENT TREATMENT (Methods 1)
  • aerobic treatment
  • polishing of organics
  • nitrification
  • phosphorus uptake
  • anaerobic treatment
  • denitrification
  • enrichment of volatiles acids to enhance
    phosphorus removal

45
EFFLUENT TREATMENT (Methods 2)
  • Plant Systems
  • oxidation ponds
  • constructed wetlands
  • Physical Treatment
  • sedimentation, screening, centrifuging
  • Chemical Treatment
  • phosphorus precipitation
  • disinfection

46
IMPROVING NET ENERGY
  • components in order of importance are feed
    heating, heat losses, and mixing
  • large feed heating requirement is a strong
    incentive for operation of dilute feed systems at
    ambient temperatures
  • range from 10-100 of methane product
  • high-solids systems conserve energy (may be self
    heating)

47
ODORS (1)
  • gt75 compounds formed under imbalanced anaerobic
    conditions
  • major contributors are hydrogen sulfide, volatile
    organic acids, and ammonia
  • not formed under totally aerobic conditions
    (impossible to achieve with concentrated wastes)
  • related to rapidly biodegradable waste components

48
ODORS (2)
  • less of a problem in high-solids wastes (gt25 TS)
  • most effectively reduced by balanced anaerobic
    digestion
  • hydrogen sulfide can be easily controlled and
    removed from biogas
  • can also be managed using biofilters

49
FACTORS INFLUENCING ECONOMICS
  • highly site specific
  • dependent upon several factors
  • land and labor costs
  • effluent discharge regulations
  • energy prices
  • herd size
  • larger piggeries justify more complex treatment
    systems

50
SUMMARY OF ECONOMIC STUDIES (1)
  • Sweeten et al. (1981)
  • construction costs, 22-36 per 68 kg hog
  • 214-357 per m3 digester volume
  • Chandler (1983)
  • 1000 head, 89,000, 75kw covered lagoon
  • paypack period was 3 years
  • Yang (1995)
  • treatment costs per year per head is 3.73 for
    herd of 300 3.01 for herd of 1000

51
SUMMARY OF ECONOMIC STUDIES (2)
  • Oleszkiewicz compared 12 systems for herds of
    gt10,000
  • traditional systems using extended aeration,
    coagulation, lagoons, and land disposal were not
    cost effective
  • cost effective systems used high-rate anaerobic
    and aerobic operations (1/3 to 1/2 cost of
    traditional systems)
  • anaerobic treatment used for secondary treatment,
    treatment of sludges, and denitrification
  • aerobic treatment was used to polish digester
    effluent and biological nutrient removal

52
DEMOGRAPHIC TRENDS THAT WILL INFLUENCE SWINE
WASTE MANAGEMENT
  • increase in human population
  • increase in worldwide swine consumption
  • increase in swine consumption in developing
    countries
  • decrease in swine consumption in developed
    countries
  • centralization of swine production
  • stricter environmental regulations
  • stricter public and animal health regulations

53
FUTURE TRENDS IN SWINE WASTE MANAGEMENT
(developed countries)
  • piggeries will be treated like other point-source
    industries
  • wastes will be rapidly removed from source and
    treated to prevent harm to animals and workers
  • wastes will be treated much like human wastes
    with solids separation, organic removal, nutrient
    removal, and disinfection

54
FUTURE TRENDS IN SWINE WASTE MANAGEMENT
(developing countries)
  • piggeries will be smaller (except those involved
    in export)
  • pollution control will be slower
  • high level of treatment will coincide with high
    level treatment of human wastes

55
TRENDS THAT MAY LEAD TO SUSTAINABLE SWINE WASTE
MANAGEMENT
  • anaerobic treatment because of less sludge and
    odors
  • high-solids systems may to reduce water
    management problems
  • location of piggeries in the vicinity of feed
    production to facilitate cycling of nutrients
  • life cycle assessment for selection of waste
    management systems

56
LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT OF WASTE MANAGEMENT
  • feed production and processing
  • waste collection and storage
  • waste transport
  • air emissions
  • water emissions, net energy consumption
  • fate of solids (e.g. use as compost)

57
INTEGRATED WASTE TREATMENT SYSTEM (Standardized
Taiwan Design)
  • mechanical bar screen
  • aerated grit chamber
  • solid/liquid separator
  • composting
  • preliminary settling
  • sludge drying bed
  • control system
  • primary settling
  • anaerobic digesters (RMP)
  • equalization basin
  • aeration tank
  • sedimentation
  • 2 sludge thickeners
  • 2 sludge drying beds
  • belt filter press
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