1 / 44

Digestion of Manure and High Strength Wastes

Learn about RCM Biothane's digestion solutions for mixed manure and food waste, with case studies and operating requirements. Discover the benefits and potential pitfalls of digesting these materials.

jonesbrian
Download Presentation

Digestion of Manure and High Strength Wastes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Digestion of Manure and High Strength Wastes Mark A. Moser RCM Biothane LLC Berkeley, CA 510-834-4568

  2. RCM - Who We Are • Digesters are our only business, • >20 years in the digester business • >51 digesters operating • Staff of 12 in Oakland, California and Camden, NJ

  3. RCM Philosophy • Cost Effective Construction • Easy to operate • Flexibility

  4. RCM Digesters for mixed manure and food waste • Covered Lagoon – solubles only • Heated mixed tank or lagoon • Plug Flow • Multi-farm • Multi-waste

  5. Castelanelli Brothers Dairy Lodi, CA Covered Lagoon Digester 2,000 cows, Sand Bedding, Flush Collection 180 kW Generator RCM Digesters

  6. Castelanelli Dairy – 180 kW

  7. GasHandling Castelanelli, Lodi, Ca

  8. Typical heated mixed digester

  9. Agro Super, Chile, 2002 120,000 finish hogs heated, mixed, covered digester, boiler

  10. 400 hp Biogas Boiler and Gas Skid, Chile

  11. WPF – Wheatland,Wyoming, 2004 18,000 finish hogs, heated, mixed, concrete tank digester 160 kW engine,

  12. Plug Flow DigesterMeadowbrook DairyPhelan, CA1200 cow vacuumed drylot170 kW, separated solidsJuly 2004

  13. Port of Tillamook Bay Regional Dairy Digester 4,000 cow capacity at build out 2,000 cows from 8 dairies contributing today 240 kWh continuous $2,000,000

  14. Operating Requirements: • US • No time-temperature requirements • Maybe you can add food, maybe not • HRT – 15 – 25 days • Temperature – mesophillic • Europe - Canada • Pasteurization or time/temp requirement depending on location and added materials and who is making the rules – Germany v Denmark • HRT – 12 – 20 days • Temperature – depends on HRT

  15. RCM First Accidental Co-digestion • 24 years ago cheese whey from Marin French Cheese was added to dairy manure at the Marindale Dairy Digester. • Good News! Some whey made some extra gas. • The owner then added too much whey and almost killed the digester.

  16. 1. Why manure and food waste? • Food waste is typically highly biodegradable • Society wants degradable wastes managed to minimize public health impact • Digesters degrade highly biodegradable materials in a controlled fashion and the effluent doesn’t smell, support flies or vermin. • Farm digester manure is a complete substrate • Food waste may need nutrients from manure to enhance degradation

  17. 2. Why manure and food waste? • Farm View • Profit • Tipping fees • Extra Gas and Electricity Production • Waste Generator View • Reduced disposal cost while meeting society goal of controlled degradation • Farm has land to manage the waste.

  18. What digests: • Protein - Slaughterhouse waste, fish processing, road kill • Vegetable oils • Fats, Oils, Grease (maybe not so well) • Carbohydrates – starch, sugar, fruit juice,whey and whey products, grains, some grain processing products • Most cleaning chemicals

  19. What doesn’t digest: • Sticks, leaves • Rocks and cement blocks • Metal, glass, plastic, rubber gloves • Some cleaning or disinfecting chemicals

  20. Bad things to try to digest without testing • Petroleum products • Chemicals • Pesticides and herbicides • Toxic anything • Drugs

  21. Matlink Dairy, Clymer, NY 900 cows + organic wastes, 130 kW Up to 225,000 ft3/d, solids separated RCM Digesters.com

  22. The learning • Check what’s in the truck • Big flares can be your friend

  23. RCM Complete Mix Digester Gypsy Hill Farm - Lancaster, PA 4,000 Pigs and Whey Biogas and 120 kW since 1983 Original: Energy Cycle 1983 RCM: redesign, rebuild, increase capacity 2000

  24. The learning: • Steady is good

  25. Langerwerf Dairy, Durham, CA 1983, 350 cows, 70 kW, 45 kW without FOG 70 kW plus flare with FOG

  26. The learning: • Too much of a good thing is bad

  27. Kluthe Farm– Dodge, NE, 2006 8,000 finish hogs, 70 kW,

  28. The learning: • Ditto on too much of a good thing. • The consultant really meant what he said.

  29. Patterson Dairy, Auburn, NY, 2005, 1200 cows and whey, 200 kW, big flare, solids

  30. The learning: • Ditto on the big flare, gas keeps on coming • One mans whey permeate is another mans processed whey concentrate

  31. Van Ommering Dairy, Lakeside, CA. 2005, 600 cows, thick FOG, 130 kW

  32. The learning: • Steady feeding keeps the engine running • Ditto on the evil nature of utilities – (Sorry I can’t help myself)

  33. Lastly – 28,000 steers and thin stillage, coming 2006

  34. The learning: • Learning has no end and • Déjà vu happens all over again.

  35. Potential Pitfalls • Zoning - Food waste is sometimes ruled an industrial waste. A farm might have to be rezoned for accepting industrial waste. • Permitting – Food waste is often regulated as a solid waste. A farm may have to have a solid waste permit and compliance schedule to operate.

  36. Nutrients - The other pitfall: • When bringing waste to a farm, are nutrients coming in the waste? • Can imported nutrients be used on the farm? • Does the nutrient management plan or permit need to be altered? YES!

  37. Advice: • Permit a digester for food waste • Be honest with the neighbors • THERE IS HOPE • Enlightened states like New York and Pennsylvania have been reasonable. • Enlightenment awaits provinces like Ontario and states like California

  38. The Rules of Digesters • Do • Feed daily • Feed a constant diet • Keep the digester warm •  Don’t • Feed too much or too little • Over or under heat

  39. The Rules Food Wastes • Rule 1. There are no rules. • Not all food waste is equal. • Waste means waste to the producer. • Truckload means what’s in the truck. • Quality or quantity? • Never on Sunday unless its Sunday.

  40. The Rules of Mixed Wastes • A digester that receives food waste should be a digester designed to receive food waste.

  41. The Consequences of Violating the Rules: • Death to the digester • Dishonor to the operator • Loss of waste source.

  42. What RCM Digesters does: • Budget Prices • 2. Feasibility Study • 3. Design and equipment supply • 4. Turnkey construction

More Related