Litcius/Paper detail

The Effect of Heat Removal during Thermophilic Phase on Energetic Aspects of Biowaste Composting Process

P. Sołowiej, Patrycja Pochwatka, Agnieszka Wawrzyniak, Krzysztof Łapiński, Andrzej Lewicki, Jacek Dach

2021Energies24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Composting is the natural, exothermic process where the huge amount of heat that is created is an issue of organic matter decomposition. However, too high temperature can reduce the microbial activity during the thermophilic composting phase. The aim of this study was to analyze the effect of heat excess removal from composted materials on the process dynamic. The experiment was performed in two parallel bioreactors. One of them was equipped with a heat removal system from the bed of the composted material. Three experiments were carried out with mixtures of different proportions: biological waste, wheat straw, and spent coffee grounds. The content of each option was determined based on a previous study of substrates to maintain the C/N ratio for the right composting process, provide adequate porosity composted material, and enable a proper degree of aeration. The study showed the possibility of receiving part of the heat from the bed of composted material during the thermophilic phase of the process without harm both to the course of composting and the quality of the final product. This shows that at a real scale, it can be possible to recover an important amount of heat from composted materials as a low-temperature heat source.

Topics & Concepts

AerationWaste managementStrawExothermic reactionCompostEnvironmental scienceThermophilePulp and paper industryOrganic matterProcess (computing)Materials scienceChemistryEngineeringOperating systemEnzymeComputer scienceBiochemistryInorganic chemistryOrganic chemistryComposting and Vermicomposting TechniquesGreen IT and Sustainability