Abstract

Three main parameters of palm oil mill effluent (POME) i.e. biological oxygen demand (BOD), total suspended solids (TSS) and oil and grease (O&G), at high concentrations, have hindered efficient anaerobic digestion (AD) due to sludge flotation and scum formation. In this study, Moringa Oleifera extract was co-digested with POME to allow TSS and O&G to be coagulated and settled, and hence, an immobilisation media formed for better digestibility. Mono-digestion (POME, T1 and M. oleifera extract, T2, separately) served as control while co-digestion involved dosing 50 mL of M. oleifera extract (500 mg/L) into a fixed volume of POME (450 mL) at two feeding modes: daily, day 1 to day 30 (T3) and one-time, day 1 (T4). Treatments T1-T4 were conducted in an enclosed AD system for 30 days and the undesirable organic materials removal efficiencies i.e. BODremoval, TSSremoval and O&Gremoval were compared. POME co-digestion, T4, showed an improved 92% TSSremoval, 94% BODremoval and methane yield of 24.3 mL CH4/g COD removed. The results suggested that the nitrogen-fixing capabilities of anoxic microbial cells enhanced proliferation and growth encapsulated within the immobilisation media. Methanogen bacterial DNAs isolated from POME, granular sludge and anaerobically-treated POME were identified as Methanoculleus spp., Methanolinea spp. and Methanoculleus spp., respectively. Two-step complementary DNA (cDNA) and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) confirmed the highest methanogen DNA concentration in T4. Therefore, the naturally occurring underutilised M. oleifera can be an organic coagulant for efficient POME co-digestion with an overall 69% and 59.5% higher methane yield and TSSremoval than mono-digestion.

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