Abstract
Waste from public green areas represents large quantities of grassy phytomass. The grass is usually utilised by composting, combustion or anaerobic fermentation. However, the classical composts are time-demanding, the quality of accelerated composts is low, combustion is under increasing criticism and conventional anaerobic fermentation requires high investment. A new method of two-fraction anaerobic fermentation of grass waste consisting from a hot maceration, up-flow anaerobic sludge blanket reactor, steam explosion, horizontally stirred batch anaerobic fermentors and a charcoal kiln, all run on waste heat from a co-generation unit was investigated on a commercial scale. The results shows that due to faster energy utilisation the two-fraction technology requires smaller fermentors and hence the technology is approximately one-third less costly than conventional systems, with 4 years shorter payback time. Additionally, huge amounts of charcoal are produced. However, the process control and optimisation is more demanding.
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