For many years, anaerobic digestion has been utilized in order to treat the odorous, pathogenic, and dissolved-oxygen-reducing-characteristics of both anthropogenic and livestock effluent waste streams. In addition to this beneficial biological treatment, such digestion provides both methane gas and digestate which serve as a valuable fuel and fertilizer, respectively. However, food waste also has the potential to serve as a useful feedstock for anaerobic digestion due to its high volatile (combustible) solids content and propensity for rapid biodegradation. There are a number of parameters of concern when using food waste for such digestion which increases the operation complexity of digester systems, but if such devices are properly monitored and adjusted, food waste has the potential to serve as a sole feedstock or as part of a dual manure-food waste input; both cases provide an improvement in gas generation production.
Published in | Journal of Energy and Natural Resources (Volume 2, Issue 1) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.jenr.20130201.11 |
Page(s) | 1-6 |
Creative Commons |
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2013. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Bacteria, Decompositions, Decay, Methane
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APA Style
Krishna Kumar, Omprakash Sahu. (2013). Utilizations of Food Waste as an Anaerobic Digester Feedstock. Journal of Energy and Natural Resources, 2(1), 1-6. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jenr.20130201.11
ACS Style
Krishna Kumar; Omprakash Sahu. Utilizations of Food Waste as an Anaerobic Digester Feedstock. J. Energy Nat. Resour. 2013, 2(1), 1-6. doi: 10.11648/j.jenr.20130201.11
AMA Style
Krishna Kumar, Omprakash Sahu. Utilizations of Food Waste as an Anaerobic Digester Feedstock. J Energy Nat Resour. 2013;2(1):1-6. doi: 10.11648/j.jenr.20130201.11
@article{10.11648/j.jenr.20130201.11, author = {Krishna Kumar and Omprakash Sahu}, title = {Utilizations of Food Waste as an Anaerobic Digester Feedstock}, journal = {Journal of Energy and Natural Resources}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {1-6}, doi = {10.11648/j.jenr.20130201.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jenr.20130201.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.jenr.20130201.11}, abstract = {For many years, anaerobic digestion has been utilized in order to treat the odorous, pathogenic, and dissolved-oxygen-reducing-characteristics of both anthropogenic and livestock effluent waste streams. In addition to this beneficial biological treatment, such digestion provides both methane gas and digestate which serve as a valuable fuel and fertilizer, respectively. However, food waste also has the potential to serve as a useful feedstock for anaerobic digestion due to its high volatile (combustible) solids content and propensity for rapid biodegradation. There are a number of parameters of concern when using food waste for such digestion which increases the operation complexity of digester systems, but if such devices are properly monitored and adjusted, food waste has the potential to serve as a sole feedstock or as part of a dual manure-food waste input; both cases provide an improvement in gas generation production.}, year = {2013} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Utilizations of Food Waste as an Anaerobic Digester Feedstock AU - Krishna Kumar AU - Omprakash Sahu Y1 - 2013/06/10 PY - 2013 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jenr.20130201.11 DO - 10.11648/j.jenr.20130201.11 T2 - Journal of Energy and Natural Resources JF - Journal of Energy and Natural Resources JO - Journal of Energy and Natural Resources SP - 1 EP - 6 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-7404 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jenr.20130201.11 AB - For many years, anaerobic digestion has been utilized in order to treat the odorous, pathogenic, and dissolved-oxygen-reducing-characteristics of both anthropogenic and livestock effluent waste streams. In addition to this beneficial biological treatment, such digestion provides both methane gas and digestate which serve as a valuable fuel and fertilizer, respectively. However, food waste also has the potential to serve as a useful feedstock for anaerobic digestion due to its high volatile (combustible) solids content and propensity for rapid biodegradation. There are a number of parameters of concern when using food waste for such digestion which increases the operation complexity of digester systems, but if such devices are properly monitored and adjusted, food waste has the potential to serve as a sole feedstock or as part of a dual manure-food waste input; both cases provide an improvement in gas generation production. VL - 2 IS - 1 ER -