Abstract

The effect of different natural zeolite concentrations on the anaerobic digestion of piggery waste was studied. Natural zeolite doses in the range 0.2–10 g/l of wastewater were used in batch experiments, which were carried out at temperatures between 27°C and 30°C. Total chemical oxygen demand (COD), total and volatile solids, ammonia and organic nitrogen, pH, total volatile fatty acids (TVFA), alkalinity (Alk) and accumulative methane production were determined during 30 days of digestion. The anaerobic digestion process was favored by the addition of natural zeolite at doses between 2 and 4 g/l and increasingly inhibited at doses beyond 6 g/l. A first-order kinetic model of COD removal was used to determine the apparent kinetic constants of the process. The kinetic constant values increased with the zeolite amount up to a concentration of 4 g/l. The values of the maximum accumulative methane production ( G m) increased until zeolite concentrations of 2–4 g/l. The addition of zeolite reduced the values of the TVFA/Alk ratio while increasing the pH values, and these facts could contribute to the process failure at zeolite doses of 10 g/l.

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