| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1055650 | Journal of Environmental Management | 2015 | 8 Pages |
•Water separated municipal organic waste was co-digested with sewage sludge.•The maximal biogas production from the mixture was achieved at 35 °C.•Thermophilic co-digestion process was inhibited by volatile fatty acids.•The highest free ammonia concentrations were detected in thermophilic co-digestion.
This study investigates the anaerobic digestion of the hydromechanically sorted organic fraction of municipal solid wastes (HS-OFMSW) co-digested with sewage sludge (SS). Eight laboratory-scale experiments were conducted under semi-continuous conditions at 15 and 20 days of solids retention time (SRT). The biogas yield from the waste reached 309 to 315 dm3/kgVS and 320 to 361 dm3/kgVS under mesophilic and thermophilic conditions, respectively. The addition of SS to HS-OFMSW (1:1 by weight) improved the C/N balance of the mixture, and the production of biogas through anaerobic mesophilic digestion increased to 494 dm3/kgVS, which corresponded to 316 dm3CH4/kgVS. However, when SS and HS-OFMSW were treated under thermophilic conditions, methanogenesis was inhibited by volatile fatty acids and free ammonia, which concentrations reached 5744 gCH3COOH/m3 and 1009 gNH3/m3, respectively.
