Abstract

Inadequate mixing has been proven to be a major cause of anaerobic digester failure. This study revealed the mechanism of mixing intervals on high-solids anaerobic co-digestion (HS-AcoD) of food waste (FW) and sewage sludge (SS). Optimized intermittent mixing time (15 min/h) was determined through computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation. Experimental results indicated that the simulated intermittent mixing could shorten digestion time and increase cumulative methane output (366.8 mL/gVS) compared with continuous mixing and unmixing. Mixing could considerably accelerate substrate solubilization and hydrolysis. Maximum rates of acidogenesis (53.35 %) and methanogenesis (49.41 %) were observed with an optimized intermittent mixing (15 min/h). Vigorous mixing induced apoptosis and disrupted syntrophic metabolism, whereas intermittent mixing promoted the syntrophic metabolism between Syntrophomonas and Methanobacterium, and led to an enrichment of genes involved in acidogenic and methanogenic pathways. These findings have important implications for the development of an optimized intermittent mixing strategy for maximizing HS-AcoD efficiency of FW and SS.

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