Methane generation from water hyacinth biomass

One of the most pressing problems of our industrialized society is the uncertainty of maintaining an adequated supply of energy. As fossil fuels continue to decline in availability, the search for alternative sources of energy intensifies. One alternative is the production of methane gas by the fermentation of various types, of biomass. Research has been conducted for the cultivation of the fresh-water macrophyte, the water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes), as a potential biomass source able to be converted into methane and as a nutritive feed. The results were the anaerobic filter digester had a maximum production of 130 liters methane/Kg volatile solids added with a hidraulic retention time of 10 days and the biogas contains 64% methane. The contact process had a maximum production of 162 I CH/Kg v.s. added with a hidraulic retention time of 15 days and the biogas contains 65% methane. The mixed flow reactor had a maximum production of 146 L CH/Kg v.s. added with hidraulic retention time of 25 days and the biogas contains 65% methane. The maximum depuration obtained for these digesters were 49% with a hidraulic retention time of 10 days for the anaerobic filter digester. The contact proce s and mixed flow eactors had 65% for 15 and 25 days of hidraulic retention time, repectively. Finally, the acids volatile concentration for these digesters were for the anaerobic filter digester 71 mg acetic/l with a retention time of 10 days. For the contact process 65 mg acetic/l with retention time of 15 days and for the mixed flow reactor 58 mg acetic/l with retention time of 25 days. © 1992, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Main Authors: Delgado, M., Guardiola, E., Bigeriego, M.
Format: journal article biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: 1992
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/5028
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spelling dig-inia-es-20.500.12792-50282020-12-15T09:55:00Z Methane generation from water hyacinth biomass Delgado, M. Guardiola, E. Bigeriego, M. One of the most pressing problems of our industrialized society is the uncertainty of maintaining an adequated supply of energy. As fossil fuels continue to decline in availability, the search for alternative sources of energy intensifies. One alternative is the production of methane gas by the fermentation of various types, of biomass. Research has been conducted for the cultivation of the fresh-water macrophyte, the water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes), as a potential biomass source able to be converted into methane and as a nutritive feed. The results were the anaerobic filter digester had a maximum production of 130 liters methane/Kg volatile solids added with a hidraulic retention time of 10 days and the biogas contains 64% methane. The contact process had a maximum production of 162 I CH/Kg v.s. added with a hidraulic retention time of 15 days and the biogas contains 65% methane. The mixed flow reactor had a maximum production of 146 L CH/Kg v.s. added with hidraulic retention time of 25 days and the biogas contains 65% methane. The maximum depuration obtained for these digesters were 49% with a hidraulic retention time of 10 days for the anaerobic filter digester. The contact proce s and mixed flow eactors had 65% for 15 and 25 days of hidraulic retention time, repectively. Finally, the acids volatile concentration for these digesters were for the anaerobic filter digester 71 mg acetic/l with a retention time of 10 days. For the contact process 65 mg acetic/l with retention time of 15 days and for the mixed flow reactor 58 mg acetic/l with retention time of 25 days. © 1992, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved. 2020-10-22T18:47:29Z 2020-10-22T18:47:29Z 1992 journal article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/5028 10.1080/10934529209375733 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ open access
institution INIA ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
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databasecode dig-inia-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del INIA España
language eng
description One of the most pressing problems of our industrialized society is the uncertainty of maintaining an adequated supply of energy. As fossil fuels continue to decline in availability, the search for alternative sources of energy intensifies. One alternative is the production of methane gas by the fermentation of various types, of biomass. Research has been conducted for the cultivation of the fresh-water macrophyte, the water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes), as a potential biomass source able to be converted into methane and as a nutritive feed. The results were the anaerobic filter digester had a maximum production of 130 liters methane/Kg volatile solids added with a hidraulic retention time of 10 days and the biogas contains 64% methane. The contact process had a maximum production of 162 I CH/Kg v.s. added with a hidraulic retention time of 15 days and the biogas contains 65% methane. The mixed flow reactor had a maximum production of 146 L CH/Kg v.s. added with hidraulic retention time of 25 days and the biogas contains 65% methane. The maximum depuration obtained for these digesters were 49% with a hidraulic retention time of 10 days for the anaerobic filter digester. The contact proce s and mixed flow eactors had 65% for 15 and 25 days of hidraulic retention time, repectively. Finally, the acids volatile concentration for these digesters were for the anaerobic filter digester 71 mg acetic/l with a retention time of 10 days. For the contact process 65 mg acetic/l with retention time of 15 days and for the mixed flow reactor 58 mg acetic/l with retention time of 25 days. © 1992, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved.
format journal article
author Delgado, M.
Guardiola, E.
Bigeriego, M.
spellingShingle Delgado, M.
Guardiola, E.
Bigeriego, M.
Methane generation from water hyacinth biomass
author_facet Delgado, M.
Guardiola, E.
Bigeriego, M.
author_sort Delgado, M.
title Methane generation from water hyacinth biomass
title_short Methane generation from water hyacinth biomass
title_full Methane generation from water hyacinth biomass
title_fullStr Methane generation from water hyacinth biomass
title_full_unstemmed Methane generation from water hyacinth biomass
title_sort methane generation from water hyacinth biomass
publishDate 1992
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/5028
work_keys_str_mv AT delgadom methanegenerationfromwaterhyacinthbiomass
AT guardiolae methanegenerationfromwaterhyacinthbiomass
AT bigeriegom methanegenerationfromwaterhyacinthbiomass
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