Anaerobic digestion is basically a simple process carried out in a
number of steps that can use almost any organic material as a substrate – it
occurs in digestive systems, marshes, rubbish dumps, septic tanks and the
Arctic Tundra.
Humans tend to make the process as complicated as possible by
trying to improve on nature in complex machines but a simple approach is still
possible, as I hope you see in this website.
Conventional anaerobic digestion has been a “liquid” process,
where waste is mixed with water to facilitate digestion, but a “solid” process
is also possible, as occurs in landfill sites.
As methane is very hard to compress I see its best use as for
stationary fuel, rather than mobile fuel. It takes a lot of energy to compress
the gas (this energy is usually just wasted), plus you have the hazard of high
pressure. A variable volume storage (flexible bag or floating drum are the two
main variants) is much easier and cheaper to arrange than high pressure
cylinders, regulators and compressors.
I think biogas is best used directly for cooking/heating, light
(pdf) or even absorption refrigeration rather than the complication and energy
waste of trying to make electricity from biogas. You can also run pumps and
equipment off a gas powered engine rather than using electricity.
There are many advantages of biogas over wood as a cooking fuel:-
* Less labor than tree felling
* Trees can be retained
* Biogas is a quick, easily controlled fuel
* No smoke or smell (unless there is a leak – then you need to know
anyway!) so reduced eye/respiratory irritation
* Clean pots
* Sludge is a better fertilizer than manure or synthetic fertilizers (and
is cheaper then manufactured products)
* Reduced pathogen transmission compared to untreated waste
* Trees can be retained
* Biogas is a quick, easily controlled fuel
* No smoke or smell (unless there is a leak – then you need to know
anyway!) so reduced eye/respiratory irritation
* Clean pots
* Sludge is a better fertilizer than manure or synthetic fertilizers (and
is cheaper then manufactured products)
* Reduced pathogen transmission compared to untreated waste
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