Abstract

The safe disposal of sewage sludge (SS) and food waste digestate residues (DR) is a tough issue considering the difficulty of dewatering and the environmental risks from heavy metals and pathogens. This study combined hydrothermal pretreatment (HP), anaerobic digestion (AD), and pyrolysis to synergistically dispose of SS and DR to enhance dewaterability, recover energy, and prepare biochar with heavy metal immobilization. The results showed that the solid contents of centrifuged cakes increased after HP at 180 °C of SS with the addition of 25% and 50% mass fractions of DR. The centrate from co-HP had a high chemical oxygen demand (COD) and was further treated by AD at 37 °C, producing 193.75 and 210.39 mL/g CODinput (25 °C and 1 atm) of cumulative CH4 under the addition of 50% and 75% mass fractions of DR, respectively. The methanogenic types in AD converted from hydrogen utilization to acetic acid utilization with increasing DR ratio. Zn, Cu, Ni, and Pb were primarily left in the biochar after 50% mass fraction of DR was mixed in the HP combined with pyrolysis at 700 °C; the chemical fractionation of Zn, Cu, Cr, and Pb in the biochar increased to over 85% of the residual fractions, resulting in the lowest potential ecological risk index (15.22, low risk). The CH4 produced from the AD of the co-HP centrate (50: 50, w/w) can supply heat for the HP process, reducing the energy input by 89%. This co-disposal strategy can effectively recover carbon resources from solid wastes to reduce carbon emissions.

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