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Thermal hydrolysis treatment of digestates derived from food waste and sewage sludge – effect on residual methane potential

Abstract

Digestate, a key byproduct of anaerobic digestion (AD), holds residual methane potential (RMP) that must be stabilized or recovered to prevent greenhouse gas emissions after field use. Thermal hydrolysis (TH), typically a pretreatment for AD, improves biogas production. This study assesses RMP in digestates from food waste (FW) and sewage sludge (SS) biogas plants, treated with TH at 160 and 190 °C. For the liquid fraction, FW digestate at 160 °C yielded 1.5 times more methane than untreated digestate, while SS digestate showed a threefold increase. The solid fraction of FW digestate at 160 °C had 1.4 times higher methane yield than untreated, but SS digestate produced less methane after TH. Adding sulfuric acid after TH increased phosphate release but reduced methane production in both digestates. Overall, TH as a post-treatment enhanced organic content release into the liquid fraction, enhancing methane yield, while acid addition improved phosphorus solubility, thereby enhancing digestate's nutrient value.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Energy Research / Thermal Energy
  • Norwegian University of Life Sciences
  • Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research

Year

2025

Published in

Water Science and Technology

ISSN

0273-1223

Volume

91

Issue

11

Page(s)

1234 - 1247

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository