Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8869829 | Waste Management | 2018 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Anaerobic digestion was investigated as a potential method for on-farm disposal of fallen stock (pig carcases), degrading the carcase material to produce biogas and digestate. The effects of feedstock (sugar beet pulp or pig carcase material or a 50:50 mix) and organic loading rate (50â¯g-TS Lâ1 or 100â¯g-TS Lâ1), during mesophilic (35â¯Â°C) anaerobic digestion were investigated. Anaerobic digestion was achieved for all experimental treatments, however the pig carcase material at the higher organic loading rate produced the second highest methane yield (0.56â¯Nm3 kg-VSâ1 versus a range of 0.14-0.58â¯Nm3 kg-VSâ1 for other treatments), with the highest percentage of methane in total biogas (61.6% versus a range of 36.1-55.2% for all other treatments). Satisfactory pathogen reduction is a legislative requirement for disposal of carcase material. Pathogens were quantified throughout the anaerobic digestion process. Enterococcus faecalis concentrations decreased to negligible levels (2.8 log10 CFU g-TSâ1), whilst Clostridium perfringens levels remained unaffected by treatment throughout the digestion process (5.3â¯Â±â¯0.2 log10 CFU g-TSâ1).
Keywords
VFAABPPCMBSEEFSAOLRSBPCFUC:NEuropean Food Safety AuthorityVolatile fatty acidsTotal solidsvolatile solidsBovine spongiform encephalopathySugar beet pulpAnimal by-productsFeedstockOrganic loading rateAnaerobic digestioncolony-forming unitsfresh weightUnited KingdomCarbon:nitrogen ratioEuropean Commission
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Authors
Marie E. Kirby, Michael K. Theodorou, Carole M. Brizuela, James A. Huntington, Jayne Powles, Robert G. Wilkinson,