Evolution of composition of dairy manure supernatant in a controlled dung pit
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Rico de la Hera, Carlos



Fecha
2009-12-01Derechos
© Taylor and Francis. This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Environmental Technology on 2009, available online: http://wwww.tandfonline.com/10.1080/09593330903100001
Publicado en
Environmental Technology, Vol. 30, No. 13, 1 December 2009, 1351–1359
Editorial
Taylor and Francis
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Dairy manure
Volatile fatty acids
Hydrolysis
Acidogenesis
Methanization
Resumen/Abstract
Anaerobic conversion of dairy manure into biogas is an attractive way of managing this waste. It is well known that the hydrolysis of large molecules into small, directly biodegradable ones is the rate limiting step of the overall anaerobic process. The present work studies the development of the hydrolytic and acidogenic stages of dairy manure with different solid concentrations (40, 60 and 80 g VS/L) at ambient temperature (20 ° C). The purpose was to determine the operational conditions that provide a liquid fraction with a high soluble chemical oxygen demand (COD) and a high volatile fatty acids (VFA) content in manure before the methanogenic stage starts up. At 20 ° C, the evolution of the studied parameters showed that, in a controlled plug-flow dung pit, the hydrolytic and acidogenic stages progressed moderately in a continuous way during the 25 days that the experimentation lasted, whereas no methanization was observed. Supernatant COD and VFA concentrations increased 30% and 107%, respectively, for the 60 g VS/L samples. Manure was also operated at 35 ° C with a similar increase in supernatant COD but a higher increase in VFA, 154%. For both operational temperatures, the predominant VFAs were, in this order, acetic, propionic and butyric acids. During the operation at 35 ° C, the methanogenic stage started between days 20 and 25 for the samples with lower solids content, i.e. 40 and 60 g VS/L.
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