Thursday, 9 April 2020

How to Make Low Cost Portable Biogas Pant at Home

The people living in poor and rural areas of developing counties always facing the problem of basic energy therefore renewable energy sources are necessary to mitigate this problem. In villages, people use firewood as a fuel for heating and cooking purposes but it produces pollution and smoke that are dangerous for human health. Firewood also contributes in deforestation which causes distortion or imbalance in the ecosystem. Rural areas inhabitants can use biogas as a replacement for cooking gas to reduce their gas bill. Biogas consists of methane CH4 (55-70%), CO2 (25-50%), H2O (1-5%), H2S (0-0.5%), N2 (0-5%) and NH3 (0-0.05%). Methane gas produce from a biogas digester in anaerobic condition (absence of oxygen) however, operating a large digester in a densely populated places and insufficient areas can be challenging due to inefficient waste management systems. On the other hand, using a small-scale portable biogas digester could overcome these problems. In this work, low cost portable biogas digester is designed and evaluated for biogas production from natural sources available in India such as cow dung, food waste and plant waste.This design, while applicable for a typical rural Indian family and can also be utilized globally.

A.          Benefits of Biogas
·         Biogas systems produce clean energy for household use. After an initial investment on biogas plant there is no need to spend more money on fuel and no more smoke and pollution produce from wood or charcoal.
·         Biogas makes cooking quicker and easier than cooking with firewood.
·         A farm with a biogas system is a cleaner and safer place, it kills the bacteria in livestock manure.
·         Biogas system produces excellent and safe fertilizers for the agriculture purpose.
·         Biogas systems can play major role against global warming by allowing to burn methane from organic waste, instead of letting it escape into the atmosphere where it adds to the greenhouse effect.

B.         Biogas Digester
Biogas produce by decomposition of  organic waste in a biogas digester. The size of a digester can vary according to its application and capacity from a small household system to a large commercial plant having thousands cubic meters. Farmers mostly use cow dung as a feedstock to feed into digester. Two simple biogas digester designs have been developed, the fixed dome type digester and the floating dome digester. The digestion process is same in both digesters but the gas collection method is different. In the floating type dome, the water sealed cover is provided in the digester in order to stop the gas leakage when the floating dome rises as gas is produced and acts as a storage chamber, whereas the fixed dome type has a lower gas storage capacity and requires good sealing in order to prevent gas leakage when the high pressure developed by gas in the digester. Both the digesters have been designed for use with animal waste, food waste and plant waste. The biomass is fed into the digester via the inlet pipe and undergoes fermentation process under anaerobic condition in the digestion chamber. The temperature is quite important factor in digestion process because bacteria do their work best at temperatures between 30– 60oC. It takes from 2 to 8 weeks to digest the biomass, depending on the temperature. The extra slurry or decomposed slurry is removed at the outlet for use as a fertilizer.
Due to lack of space in the home for biogas digester,  the portable biogas digester can be installed into the building or building rooftop. The size of digester will depend on how much biogas needed to meet daily cooking (and lighting) requirements, the availability and amount of biomass and water available on place. Portable biogas digesters are built using FRP (Fiber reinforced plastic) and it can be fixed in a small area. Water jacket models prevent biogas from leakage are most efficient among different designs. Portable biogas plants having two portions, one is the digester where fermentation process occurs and another portion where biogas is collected and stored. Both the portions are separated using water jacket, which is also acting as safety relief when excess gas is produced. As the regular supply of water is essential for operation, the rainwater harvesting could help for the biogas plant.

C.        Operational Parameters
Operation of a biogas plant is affected by the following factors:
·         Temperature
The methane forming bacteria works best in temperature ranges 20-60oC. Digestion at higher temperature proceeds more rapidly than at lower temperature. The gas production decreases sharply below 20oC and almost stops at 10oC
·         Pressure
 The minimum pressure in the digester should be 6-10cm of water column i.e., 1.2 bar which is ideal for proper functioning. It should never be allowed to exceed 40-50 cm of water column. Excess pressure inhibits release of gas from slurry and leakage in masonry.
·         Solid to moisture ratio in the biomass
The water and solid mass should be in equal proportion. If water content is too high in the slurry, the gas production will drop. If water content is too low, acids will form and it hinder the fermentation process.
·         pH value
During methane forming stage, pH value 6.5 to 7.5 should be maintained. In the acid forming stage, pH value may be around 6 or less.
·         Feeding rate
Optimum feed rate should be maintained in the digester. At higher feeding rate the retention period of biomass will be less and undigested Slurry may come out.
·         Carbon to nitrogen ratio
The optimum C/N ratio is 30:1 for maximum microbiological activity.
·         Seeding
In order to accelerate the fermentation process, a small amount of digested slurry containing a methane forming bacteria is added to the freshly charged slurry. This process is known as seeding. Seeding helps to start and accelerate the digestion process.
·         Mixing or stirring
Mixing of slurry get uniformity in substrate concentration and temperature, prevents the deposition of solids at the bottom and break down the scum layer.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
A.        Source of Feedstock
Cow dung is solely used as the prime source for biogas production. Cow dung generate from 3–5 cattle/day can run a simple 8–10 m3 biogas plant which is able to produce 1.5–2 m3 biogas per day which is sufficient for the family 6–8 persons, can cook meal for 2 or 3 times or may light two lamps for 3 hrs or run a refrigerator for all day and can also operate a 3-KW motor generator for 1 hr [6]. In this paper cow dung has been taken for studies. Food waste can also be used in the digester which includes vegetables, fruits and other items. The treatment process of food waste products gives hazardous waste. The usage of chemicals is one of the main reasons for this.

B.       Sample Collection
A sample of 200 kg cow dung has been taken for biogas production and equal proportion of water which mix together in the digester and forms semi solid state called slurry. The slurry formation is shown in fig.1.
 

Fig. 1 Slurry formation

C.       Cow Dung Characterization
Cow dung is not a waste product but do purify all the waste present in the nature [7]. The study was conducted on a cow dung sample collected from dairy farm. The waste was mixed with equal quantity of tap water approximately 200L to form slurry.

D.      Experimental Setup
A completely recycled anaerobic reactor made from two polyethylene water tank (used for drinking water storage). The floating type gas reactor consists of a water tank as a digester having capacity 400L and another water tank for gas storage having capacity 250L as shown in fig.2. As the gas produces in the digester and collected in the another tank which act as floating dome, raises up due to pressure created by biogas. This digestion system for AD of cow dung consists of with arrangement for feed, recirculation is made by 400L container, biogas collection and measurement by using 250L container, 90mm T joint, 90mm male adapter, 90mm cap, 90mm PVC pipe, Elbow 63mm, 63mm male adapter 2, 63mm check nut, 63mm PVC pipe, 12.5mm male adapter, 12.5 galvanized elbow, PVC adhesive seal, 50mm Ball valve, 63,50 and 12.5mm barrel piece, Funnel and Teflon tape.
 

Fig. 2 Experimental setup
E.       Reactor Operation
The cow dung slurry was fed to the reactor from the inlet with the help of funnel and the floating drum was placed in the digester. Before keeping the floating drum in the digester the gas valve was opened in order to allow the air come out from the gas chamber. To make the fermentation process fast, the place was selected so that the sun radiation can fall directly on the digester.  The fermentation process under anaerobic condition produced biogas which was collected in the gas chamber. 

 CONCLUSION
After the thorough study on the performance of biogas digester and evolution of acidogenic reactor, the following collusion has been reached. As a result of the treatment of cow dung under anaerobic digestion, the useful bi product, bio-gas has been produced with a considerable rate of decrease in the values of pH, acidity and alkalinity. Through the successful anaerobic processing of cow dung inside the reactor, methanogen gradually converts the organic acids into the methane gas and carbon dioxide, which indicates that the waste has better anaerobic biodegradability. Thus achieves a waste of resource utilization. The results show that reactor can treat animal waste with high contaminated load.