Biogas energy production from tropical biomass wastes by anaerobic digestion
Waste Products
2. Zero hunger
Tropical Climate
Albizzia
15. Life on land
7. Clean energy
01 natural sciences
Refuse Disposal
Plant Leaves
Biodegradation, Environmental
Polysaccharides
13. Climate action
Biofuels
Anaerobiosis
Biomass
Glucans
Methane
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI:
10.1016/j.biortech.2014.06.067
Publication Date:
2014-06-25T22:32:30Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
Anaerobic digestion (AD) is an attractive technology in tropical regions for converting locally abundant biomass wastes into biogas which can be used to produce heat, electricity, and transportation fuels. However, investigations on AD of tropical forestry wastes, such as albizia biomass and food wastes, such as taro, papaya, and sweet potato, are limited. In this study, these tropical biomass wastes were evaluated for biogas production by liquid AD (L-AD) and/or solid-state AD (SS-AD), depending on feedstock characteristics. When albizia leaves and chips were used as feedstocks, L-AD had greater methane yields (161 and 113 L kg(-1)VS, respectively) than SS-AD (156.8 and 59.6 L kg(-1)VS, respectively), while SS-AD achieved 5-fold higher volumetric methane productivity than L-AD. Mono-digestion and co-digestion of taro skin, taro flesh, papaya, and sweet potato achieved methane yields from 345 to 411 L kg(-1)VS, indicating the robustness of AD technology.
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