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Biogas Digester: Heart of the Anaerobic Digestion Process
By Steve Last
The Biogas Digester is at the heart Anaerobic Digestion (AD) Process, and within the digester fermentation takes place to produce methane gas (biogas), and a liquid and a solid fibrous “digestate” is produced as the residue after digestion has taken place, which is then removed from the digester.
Digesters are completely sealed vessels which are covered and sealed. Most are insulated and heated, and the digester is a recognisable at most large biogas plants as a large tall, usually vertical sided, circular tank, with an access ladder and a number of pipes leading to the top where there is also usually a pedestrian access way and handrail.
Watch this YouTube video for an introduction to the basics of the Biogas Digester
The above applies to the most common wastewater treatment works AD biogas digester plants, to agricultural installations (other than lagoon type plants), and the majority of low solids and liquid-phase high solids AD plants used in for Municipal Solid Waste biogas production.
Biogas plant digesters of this type can usually be spotted very easily when you see them by the characteristic pairing of the digester with the biogas storage tank which acts like a traditional town gas ‘gasometer’, and is usually elegantly curved or “globe” shaped. Many visibly expand and contract to accommodate the volume of biogas present, making most of them become significant landmark features.
There are such a wide range of AD process technologies which contain biogas digesters, that there are many exceptions to the above rule, with some of these being as follows:-
Low cost and usually quite small on-farm/agricultural biogas digesters are designed around a covered lagoon which is lined with a plastic membrane (usually polethylene), and this membrane is simply welded to the flexible membrane cover. The cover balloons upward under the pressure of the biogas generated and this allows it to be stored;
High solids density processes may include a biogas digester which works in so called “plug flow” in long tunnels. These vary in design according to the technology provider’s patent process and Dranco, and Schmack are companies which provide design options for digesters of this type.
Water treatment (biogas producing) digesters may be quite different and for optimum stability of an Upflow Anaerobic Sludge Blanket (UASB) digester an upturned cone shape (with the apex at the bottom) works best. However, ArrowBio’s UASB digestion tank does no such thing and looks like any ordinary vertical sided biogas digester.
Small and community scale biogas (sewage and night soil) digesters as used in China and elsewhere tend to be buried and fed by gravity. Again, the gas is usually stored in these very simple plants above the digester itself and the storage space may itself be considered to be part of the “digester”.
Image: Biogas Digester left and gas storage (white) at the Greenfinch Plant, Ludlow, UK
Within a biogas digester, where the biomass will usually be present on average for between 4 days and 3 weeks, according to the process requirements, heating and mixing takes place.
Some digesters are mixed mechanically with blades which turn, others avoid the presence of mechanical parts in the digester which are hard to maintain, by pumping.
The action of mixing and heating with the digester allows the bacteria within the digester to come into contact with the feedstock material, which provides food for the bacteria to multiple and convert the complex organic compounds into much simpler mostly soluble compounds such as sugars and starches, which then react in further stages resulting in methane gas which comprises about 60% of biogas.
If there is a particular type of biogas digester you want to know about, and you are looking for a specialist technology provider, you may continue to our anaerobic digestion technology supplier table.
If you arrived at this page after searching on the term “biogas digester” and this page does not answer your question, then please do Contact Us, or preferably join our Forum and post a question.