Effect of humic acids on batch anaerobic digestion of excess sludge
Ji Li (Beijing University of Technology)
Xiaodi Hao (Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Architecture)
Mark C.M. van Loosdrecht (Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Architecture, TU Delft - OLD BT/Cell Systems Engineering, TU Delft - BT/Environmental Biotechnology)
Yuqi Luo (Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Architecture)
Daqi Cao (Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Architecture)
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Abstract
Anaerobic digestion (AD) is a sustainable pathway towards recovering chemical energy from excess sludge, and humic substances (HSs) contained in sludge can inhibit energy (methane/CH
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) conversion efficiency. This study aims to investigate the impact of humic acids (HA) on the various processes in a batch anaerobic digestion process. For this purpose, “clean” sludge was cultivated in a laboratory to avoid HSs presence. The cultivated sludge was used in a series of batch experiments, with humic acids added at different levels. A complete AD test, as well as three sub-phase tests (hydrolytic phase; acidogenic phase; methanogenic phase) was performed and analyzed with and without HA dosing. In the single-phase AD system, dosing with HA inhibited the methanogenic efficiency by 35.1% at HA:VSS = 15%. However, the effects of HA on the three sub-phases revealed something very different. HA inhibited hydrolytic efficiency by 38.2%, promoted acidogenic efficiency by 101.5%, and finally inhibited methanogenic efficiency by 52.2%. The combined efficiency of the three sub-phases without HA dosing is calculated at 15.7%; and with HA dosing (HA:VSS = 15%) at 10.2%. Overall, the combined inhibition efficiency of the three sub-phases is equal to 35.0%, which is almost identical (35.1%) to the result observed in the single-phase AD process. The possible mechanisms behind the phenomena were analyzed and summarized in the context.
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