A Review of Pretreatment Methods to Enhance Solids Reduction during Anaerobic Digestion of Municipal Wastewater Sludges and the Resulting Digester Performance: Implications to Future Urban Biorefineries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Anaerobic Digestion in WWTP
1.2. Solids Composition
1.3. Potential Benefits of Further Optimization
2. Pretreatment Methods for Solids Reduction
2.1. Mechanical Disintegration
2.1.1. Ultrasound Pretreatment
2.1.2. Microwave Pretreatment
2.1.3. High Pressure Homogenization
2.2. Thermal Pretreatment
2.2.1. Low Temperature Heat Application
2.2.2. High Temperature Heat Application
2.2.3. Full Scale Heat Application Case Studies
2.3. Chemical Pretreatment
2.3.1. Acidic and Alkaline Addition
2.3.2. Ozone Oxidation
2.3.3. Fenton’s Reagent Pretreatment
2.4. Biological Pretreatment
2.4.1. Enzyme Addition
2.4.2. Temperature Phased Anaerobic Digestion (TPAD)
2.5. Integrated Pretreatment
2.5.1. Mechanical-Thermal Pretreatment
2.5.2. Thermal-Chemical Pretreatment
2.5.3. Mechanical-Chemical Pretreatment
3. Comparison of the Pretreatment Methods for Solids Reductions
4. Cost and Energy Demand
5. Summary
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
WWTP | Wastewater treatment plant |
WW | Wastewater |
AD | Anaerobic Digestion |
TS | Total Solid |
TSS | Total Suspended Solid |
VS | Volatile Solid |
SS | Suspended Solid |
VSS | Volatile Suspended solids |
COD | Chemical Oxygen demand |
tCOD | Total Chemical Oxygen Demand |
sCOD | Soluble chemical oxygen demand |
WAS | Waste Activated Sludge |
PS | Primary Sludge |
OFMSW | Organic Fraction of Municipal Solid Waste |
VFA | Volatile Fatty Acids |
MW | Microwave |
HPH | High Pressure Homogenization |
OLR | Organic Loading Rate |
HRT | Hydraulic Retention Time |
SRT | Solids Retention Time |
TPAD | Temperature Phased Anaerobic Digestion |
2PAD | Two phased Anaerobic Digestion |
TEA | Techno-Economic Analysis |
References
- Center for Sustainable Systems, University of Michigan. Wastewater Treatment Factsheet; University of Michigan: Ann Arbor, MI, USA, 2019. [Google Scholar]
- Infrastructure Report Card. Available online: https://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Wastewater-Final.pdf (accessed on 18 November 2020).
- Wagner, A.O.; Illmer, P. Biological Pretreatment Strategies for Second-Generation Lignocellulosic Resources to Enhance Biogas Production. Energies 2018, 11, 1797. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Tipping Fees and Reducing Disposal Costs in Wastewater Treatment. Available online: https://neowatertreatment.com/wastewater-treatment-disposal-costs/ (accessed on 10 July 2020).
- Bharambe, G.; Cesca, J.; Bustamante, H.; Van Rys, D.; Kabouris, J.; Murthy, S. Anaerobic Digestion with Recuperative Thickening Minimises Biosolids Quantities and Odours in Sydney, Australia. Proc. Ozwater 2015, 2015, 1–6. [Google Scholar]
- Tchobanoglous, G.; Burton, F.; Stensel, H. Wastewater Engineering: Treatment and Reuse, 4th ed.; McGraw Hill: NewYork, NY, USA, 2003; pp. 154–196. [Google Scholar]
- Daud, M.K.; Rizvi, H.; Akram, M.F.; Ali, S.; Rizwan, M.; Nafees, M.; Jin, Z.S. Review of Upflow Anaerobic Sludge Blanket Reactor Technology: Effect of Different Parameters and Developments for Domestic Wastewater Treatment. J. Chem. 2018, 2018, 1–13. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Certification, W.O. Advanced Anaerobic Digestion Study Guide. Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Wastewater Operator Certification; pp. 1–28. Available online: https://dnr.wi.gov/regulations/opcert/documents/wwsganaerobdigadv.pdf (accessed on 18 December 2020).
- Sludge Reduction Technologies in Wastewater Treatment Plants. Available online: http://ezproxyprod.ucs.louisiana.edu:2238/eds/ebookviewer/ebook/bmxlYmtfXzY5MDQ2OV9fQU41?sid=feac4bbf-0e16-40a3-8292-a129c0abd765@sdc-v-sessmgr03&vid=0&format=EB&rid=1 (accessed on 20 May 2020).
- Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. Wastewater Treatment Plant Operator Certification Training. Module 5: Disinfection and Chlorination; 2016; pp. 1–8. Available online: http://files.dep.state.pa.us/Water/BSDW/OperatorCertification/TrainingModules/ww05_disinfection_chlorination_wb.pdf (accessed on 19 November 2020).
- Evans, A.; Strezov, V.; Evans, T.J. Anaerobic Digestion. Biomass Process. Technol. 2014, 177–212. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Neumann, P.; Pesante, S.; Venegas, M.; Vidal, G. Developments in Pre-Treatment Methods to Improve Anaerobic Digestion of Sewage Sludge. Rev. Environ. Sci. Biotechnol. 2016, 15, 173–211. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Krishna, D.; Kalamdhad, A.S. Pre-Treatment and Anaerobic Digestion of Food Waste for High Rate Methane Production—A Review. J. Environ. Chem. Eng. 2014, 2, 1821–1830. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ariunbaatar, J.; Panico, A.; Esposito, G.; Pirozzi, F.; Lens, P.N.L. Pretreatment Methods to Enhance Anaerobic Digestion of Organic Solid Waste. Appl. Energy 2014, 123, 143–156. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wang, Q.; Wei, W.; Gong, Y.; Yu, Q.; Li, Q.; Sun, J.; Yuan, Z. Technologies for Reducing Sludge Production in Wastewater Treatment Plants: State of the Art. Sci. Total Environ. 2017, 587–588, 510–521. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tyagi, V.K.; Lo, S.L. Application of Physico-Chemical Pretreatment Methods to Enhance the Sludge Disintegration and Subsequent Anaerobic Digestion: An Up to Date Application of Physico-Chemical Pretreatment Methods to Enhance the Sludge Disintegration and Subsequent Anaerobic. Rev. Environ. Sci. Biotechnol. 2011, 10, 215–242. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kim, J.; Park, C.; Kim, T.H.; Lee, M.; Kim, S.; Kim, S.W.; Lee, J. Effects of Various Pretreatments for Enhanced Anaerobic Digestion with Waste Activated Sludge. J. Biosci. Bioeng. 2003, 95, 271–275. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Braguglia, C.M.; Gianico, A.; Gallipoli, A.; Mininni, G. The Impact of Sludge Pre-Treatments on Mesophilic and Thermophilic Anaerobic Digestion Efficiency: Role of the Organic Load. Chem. Eng. J. 2015, 270, 362–371. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Li, X.; Guo, S.; Peng, Y.; He, Y.; Wang, S.; Li, L.; Zhao, M. Anaerobic Digestion Using Ultrasound as Pretreatment Approach: Changes in Waste Activated Sludge, Anaerobic Digestion Performances and Digestive Microbial Populations. Biochem. Eng. J. 2018, 139, 139–145. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Xu, G.; Chen, S.; Shi, J.; Wang, S.; Zhu, G. Combination Treatment of Ultrasound and Ozone for Improving Solubilization and Anaerobic Biodegradability of Waste Activated Sludge. J. Hazard. Mater. 2010, 180, 340–346. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Park, W.J.; Ahn, J.H. Effects of Microwave Pretreatment on Mesophilic Anaerobic Digestion for Mixture of Primary and Secondary Sludges Compared with Thermal Pretreatment. Environ. Eng. Res. 2011, 16, 103–109. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bozkurt, Y.C.; Apul, O.G. Critical Review for Microwave Pretreatment of Waste-Activated Sludge Prior to Anaerobic Digestion. Curr. Opin. Environ. Sci. Health 2020, 14, 1–9. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Miguel, N.; Coelho, G.; Droste, R.L.; Kennedy, K.J. Evaluation of Continuous Mesophilic, Thermophilic and Temperature Phased Anaerobic Digestion of Microwaved Activated Sludge. Water Res. 2011, 45, 2822–2834. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Appels, L.; Houtmeyers, S.; Degrève, J.; Van Impe, J.; Dewil, R. Influence of Microwave Pre-Treatment on Sludge Solubilization and Pilot Scale Semi-Continuous Anaerobic Digestion. Bioresour. Technol. 2013, 128, 598–603. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zhen, G.; Lu, X.; Kato, H.; Zhao, Y.; Li, Y. Overview of Pretreatment Strategies for Enhancing Sewage Sludge Disintegration and Subsequent Anaerobic Digestion: Current Advances, Full-Scale Application and Future Perspectives. Renew. Sustain. Energy Rev. 2017, 69, 559–577. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Serrano, A.; Siles, J.A.; Martín, M.A.; Chica, A.F.; Estévez-Pastor, F.S.; Toro-Baptista, E. Improvement of Anaerobic Digestion of Sewage Sludge through Microwave Pre-Treatment. J. Environ. Manag. 2016, 177, 231–239. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Nabi, M.; Zhang, G.; Li, F.; Zhang, P.; Wu, Y.; Tao, X. Enhancement of High Pressure Homogenization Pretreatment on Biogas Production from Sewage Sludge: A Review. Desalin. Water Treat. 2020, 175, 341–351. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wahidunnabi, A.K.; Eskicioglu, C. High Pressure Homogenization and Two-Phased Anaerobic Digestion for Enhanced Biogas Conversion from Municipal Waste Sludge ScienceDirect High Pressure Homogenization and Two-Phased Anaerobic Digestion for Enhanced Biogas Conversion from Municipal Waste Sl. Water Res. 2014, 66, 430–446. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Zhang, S.; Zhang, P.; Zhang, G.; Fan, J.; Zhang, Y. Bioresource Technology Enhancement of Anaerobic Sludge Digestion by High-Pressure Homogenization. Bioresour. Technol. 2012, 118, 496–501. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Bougrier, C.; Delgenès, J.P.; Carrère, H. Impacts of Thermal Pre-Treatments on the Semi-Continuous Anaerobic Digestion of Waste Activated Sludge. Biochem. Eng. J. 2007, 34, 20–27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Carlsson, M.; Lagerkvist, A.; Morgan-Sagastume, F. The Effects of Substrate Pre-Treatment on Anaerobic Digestion Systems: A Review. Waste Manag. 2012, 32, 1634–1650. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Appels, L.; Degrève, J.; Van der Bruggen, B.; Van Impe, J.; Dewil, R. Influence of Low Temperature Thermal Pre-Treatment on Sludge Solubilisation, Heavy Metal Release and Anaerobic Digestion. Bioresour. Technol. 2010, 101, 5743–5748. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Xue, Y.; Liu, H.; Chen, S.; Dichtl, N.; Dai, X.; Li, N. Effects of Thermal Hydrolysis on Organic Matter Solubilization and Anaerobic Digestion of High Solid Sludge. Chem. Eng. J. 2015, 264, 174–180. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Yi, H.; Han, Y.; Zhuo, Y. Effect of Combined Pretreatment of Waste Activated Sludge for Anaerobic Digestion Process. Procedia Environ. Sci. 2013, 18, 716–721. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Carrère, H.; Dumas, C.; Battimelli, A.; Batstone, D.J.; Delgenès, J.P.; Steyer, J.P.; Ferrer, I. Pretreatment Methods to Improve Sludge Anaerobic Degradability: A Review. J. Hazard. Mater. 2010, 183, 1–15. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Abu-Orf, M.; Goss, T. Comparing Thermal Hydrolysis Processes (CAMBI™ and EXELYS™) For Solids Pretreatmet Prior To Anaerobic Digestion. Proc. Water Environ. Fed. 2012, 2012, 1024–1036. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Devlin, D.C.; Esteves, S.R.R.; Dinsdale, R.M.; Guwy, A.J. Bioresource Technology The Effect of Acid Pretreatment on the Anaerobic Digestion and Dewatering of Waste Activated Sludge. Bioresour. Technol. 2011, 102, 4076–4082. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Sun, D.; Qiao, M.; Xu, Y.; Ma, C.; Zhang, X. Pretreatment of Waste Activated Sludge by Peracetic Acid Oxidation for Enhanced Anaerobic Digestion. Environ. Prog. Sustain. Energy 2014, 33, 676–680. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wei, W.; Wang, Q.; Zhang, L.; Laloo, A.; Duan, H.; Batstone, D.J.; Yuan, Z. Free Nitrous Acid Pre-Treatment of Waste Activated Sludge Enhances Volatile Solids Destruction and Improves Sludge Dewaterability in Continuous Anaerobic Digestion. Water Res. 2018, 130, 13–19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Tulun, Ş.; Bilgin, M. Enhancement of Anaerobic Digestion of Waste Activated Sludge by Chemical Pretreatment. Fuel 2019, 254. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fang, W.; Zhang, P.; Zhang, G.; Jin, S.; Li, D.; Zhang, M. Bioresource Technology Effect of Alkaline Addition on Anaerobic Sludge Digestion with Combined Pretreatment of Alkaline and High Pressure Homogenization. Bioresour. Technol. 2014, 168, 167–172. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Wun, N.J. Sludge Pretreatment Methods for Enhanced Volatiles Solids Destruction and Methane Production Sludge Pretreatment Methods for Enhanced VS Destruction and CH 4 Production. Master’s Thesis, National Sun Yat sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, 2014. [Google Scholar]
- Li, H.; Li, C.; Liu, W.; Zou, S. Optimized Alkaline Pretreatment of Sludge before Anaerobic Digestion. Bioresour. Technol. 2012, 123, 189–194. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Li, H.; Jin, Y.; Mahar, R.B.; Wang, Z.; Nie, Y. Effects and Model of Alkaline Waste Activated Sludge Treatment. Bioresour. Technol. 2008, 99, 5140–5144. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wei, W.; Zhou, X.; Wang, D.; Sun, J.; Wang, Q. Free Ammonia Pre-Treatment of Secondary Sludge Significantly Increases Anaerobic Methane Production. Water Res. 2017, 118, 12–19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Goel, R.; Tokutomi, T.; Industries, K.W.; Yasui, H. Anaerobic Digestion of Excess Activated Sludge with Ozone Pre-Treatment Anaerobic Digestion of Excess Activated Sludge with Ozone Pretreatment. Water Sci. Technol. 2003. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zhang, M.; Dong, H.; Zhao, L.; Wang, D.; Meng, D. A Review on Fenton Process for Organic Wastewater Treatment Based on Optimization Perspective. Sci. Total Environ. 2019. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dewil, R.; Appels, L.; Baeyens, J.; Degr, J. Peroxidation Enhances the Biogas Production in the Anaerobic Digestion of Biosolids. J. Hazard. Mater. 2020, 146, 577–581. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Jingquan Lu, B.A. Optimization of Anaerobic Digestion of Sewage Sludge Using Thermophilic Anaerobic Pre-Treatment. Ph.D. Thesis, BioCentrum-DTU Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark, 2007; pp. 28–49. [Google Scholar]
- Carrere, H.; Antonopoulou, G.; Affes, R.; Passos, F.; Battimelli, A.; Lyberatos, G.; Ferrer, I. Review of Feedstock Pretreatment Strategies for Improved Anaerobic Digestion: From Lab-Scale Research to Full-Scale Application. Bioresour. Technol. 2016, 199, 386–397. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Brémond, U.; de Buyer, R.; Steyer, J.P.; Bernet, N.; Carrere, H. Biological Pretreatments of Biomass for Improving Biogas Production: An Overview from Lab Scale to Full-Scale. Renew. Sustain. Energy Rev. 2018, 90, 583–604. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Yin, Y.; Liu, Y.J.; Meng, S.J.; Kiran, E.U.; Liu, Y. Enzymatic Pretreatment of Activated Sludge, Food Waste and Their Mixture for Enhanced Bioenergy Recovery and Waste Volume Reduction via Anaerobic Digestion. Appl. Energy 2016, 179, 1131–1137. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Roman, H.J.; Burgess, J.E.; Pletschke, B.I. Enzyme Treatment to Decrease Solids and Improve Digestion of Primary Sewage Sludge. Afr. J. Biotechnol. 2006, 5, 963–967. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Healy, K.; Ellis, T.G.; Schmit, K.H.; Ellis, T.G. Comparison of Temperature-Phased and Two-Phase Anaerobic Co-Digestion of Primary Sludge and Municipal Solid Waste. Water Environ. Res. 2001, 73, 314–321. [Google Scholar]
- Song, Y.C.; Kwon, S.J.; Woo, J.H. Mesophilic and Thermophilic Temperature Co-Phase Anaerobic Digestion Compared with Single-Stage Mesophilic- and Thermophilic Digestion of Sewage Sludge. Water Res. 2004, 38, 1653–1662. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Mehari, B.B.; Chang, S.; Hong, Y.; Chen, H. Temperature-Phased Biological Hydrolysis and Thermal Hydrolysis Pretreatment for Anaerobic Digestion Performance Enhancement. Water 2018, 10, 1812. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Zhang, Y.; Zhang, P.; Zhang, G.; Ma, W.; Wu, H.; Ma, B. Sewage Sludge Disintegration by Combined Treatment of Alkaline+high Pressure Homogenization. Bioresour. Technol. 2012, 123, 514–519. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Mesfin Yeneneh, A.; Kanti Sen, T.; Chong, S.; Ming Ang, H.; Kayaalp, A. Effect of Combined Microwave-Ultrasonic Pretreatment on Anaerobic Biodegradability of Primary, Excess Activated and Mixed Sludge. Comput. Water Energy, Environ. Eng. 2013, 2, 7–11. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Doǧan, I.; Sanin, F.D. Alkaline Solubilization and Microwave Irradiation as a Combined Sludge Disintegration and Minimization Method. Water Res. 2009, 43, 2139–2148. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wett, B.; Phothilangka, P.; Eladawy, A. Systematic Comparison of Mechanical and Thermal Sludge Disintegration Technologies. Waste Manag. 2010, 30, 1057–1062. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Nagler, M.; Aichinger, P.; Kuprian, M.; Pümpel, T.; Insam, H.; Ebner, C. A Case Study for a Cost-Benefit-Based, Stepwise Optimization of Thermo-Chemical WAS Pre-Treatment for Anaerobic Digestion. J. Mater. Cycles Waste Manag. 2018, 20, 266–273. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Cacho Rivero, J.A.; Madhavan, N.; Suidan, M.T.; Ginestet, P.; Audic, J.-M. Enhancement of Anaerobic Digestion of Excess Municipal Sludge with Thermal and/or Oxidative Treatment. J. Environ. Eng. 2006, 132, 638–644. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cacho Rivero, J.A. Anaerobic digestion of excess municipal sludge. Optimization for increased solid destruction. Ph.D. Thesis, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA, 3 May 2005. [Google Scholar]
- Valo, A.; Carrère, H.; Delgenès, J.P. Thermal, Chemical and Thermo-Chemical Pre-Treatment of Waste Activated Sludge for Anaerobic Digestion. J. Chem. Technol. Biotechnol. 2004, 79, 1197–1203. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cho, S.; Ju, H.; Lee, J.; Kim, S. Bioresource Technology Alkaline-Mechanical Pretreatment Process for Enhanced Anaerobic Digestion of Thickened Waste Activated Sludge with a Novel Crushing Device: Performance Evaluation and Economic Analysis. Bioresour. Technol. 2014, 165, 183–190. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gong, C.; Jiang, J.; Li, D. Ultrasound Coupled with Fenton Oxidation Pre-Treatment of Sludge to Release Organic Carbon, Nitrogen and Phosphorus. Sci. Total Environ. 2015, 532, 495–500. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Jang, J.H.; Ahn, J.H. Effect of Microwave Pretreatment in Presence of NaOH on Mesophilic Anaerobic Digestion of Thickened Waste Activated Sludge. Bioresour. Technol. 2013, 131, 437–442. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dhar, B.R.; Nakhla, G.; Ray, M.B. Techno-Economic Evaluation of Ultrasound and Thermal Pretreatments for Enhanced Anaerobic Digestion of Municipal Waste Activated Sludge. Waste Manag. 2012, 32, 542–549. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kannah, R.Y.; Kavitha, S.; Rajesh Banu, J.; Yeom, I.T.; Johnson, M. Synergetic Effect of Combined Pretreatment for Energy Efficient Biogas Generation. Bioresour. Technol. 2017, 232, 235–246. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Region | Average Cost per Dry Ton (US $) | Percent Increase |
---|---|---|
Pacific North | 70 | 0% |
South Central | 41 | 15% |
Mountain | 51 | 17% |
Overall | 56 | 6% |
Study Reference | Pretreatment Method | Biogas Production | COD Removal |
---|---|---|---|
Kim et al. | 42 kHz ultrasound for 120 min | 3657 L/m3 control vs. 4413 L/m3 for ultrasound | sCOD control-1136 mg/L, pretreated sCOD 4000 mg/L |
Li et al. | 20 kHz for 0 to 100 min | 67 mg/g VS for 20 days HRT and sonication for 80 min | sCOD of 338 mg/L for control, sCOD of 8133 mg/L for 80 min sonication |
Coelho et al. | MW pretreatment using domestic microwave at 100% intensity, 2450 MHz frequency on WAS at 20 days HRT Thermophilic temperature −55 °C Mesophilic temp −35 °C | 0.5 L/d thermophilic treatment, 0.35 L/d thermophilic control 0.4 L/d mesophilic, 0.28 L/d mesophilic control | 35% tCOD removal for thermophilic treatment with 29% tCOD removal for untreated 55.6% tCOD removal for mesophilic treated vs 55.3% tCOD removal for mesophilic control |
Appels et al. | Microwave (336 kJ/kg sludge) 800 W for 3.5 min | Increase in biogas production by 50% | Increase in sCOD from 1353 mg O2/L untreated to 4247 mg O2/L MW pretreated, increase by 214% |
Serrano et al. | Microwave pretreatment of WAS at 30,000 J/kg, 400 W | 111 mL/CH4 STP/gVS of methane yield for control, 118 mL CH4 STP/g VS methane yield for pretreated | Increase in sCOD was 0.113 mg O2/g TS |
Zhang et al. | 50 MPa homogenization pressure for 1 cycle, 7 days digestion | 64% increase in biogas, 1546 mL biogas production for untreated sludge | 45% tCOD removal for 1 cycle 17% tCOD removal for untreated |
Zhang et al. | 50 Mpa homogenization pressure for 2 cycle | 3330 mL biogas produced in treated, 115% increase in biogas compared to untreated | 62% tCOD removal for 2 cycles 17% tCOD removal for untreated |
Appels et al. | Thermal treatment at 70 °C, 80 °C, 90 °C for 1 h | 34 mL/g Organic Dry Solids (ODS) biogas for untreated 35 mL/g ODS for treatment at 70 °C 75 mL/g ODS when treated at 80 °C 377 mL/g ODS when treated at 90 °C | 55,300 mg O2/L COD for untreated mg O2/L COD when treated at 70 °C mg O2/L COD when treated at 80 °C mg O2/L COD when treated at 90 °C |
Xue et al. | Thermal pretreatment at varying temperature for up to 24 h | Biogas production increased from 0.96 L/g VS removed to 101, 0.99, 1.04, & 0.94 L/gVS removed at 60 °C, 70 °C, 80 °C, & 90 °C respectively | Solubilization of COD increased from 4.5% (control) to 29%, 30%, 35%, & 51% at 60 °C, 70 °C, 80 °C, & 90 °C respectively |
Braguglia et al. | Thermal hydrolysis prior to thermophilic treatment | 0.18 Nm3/m3 d biogas production for untreated sludge 0.36 Nm3/kg VS fed | 68% sCOD removal at HRT of 15–20 days |
Devlin et al. | pH 2 pretreatment using 37% HCl | 14% increase in methane yield compared to untreated WAS | 30 g/L tCOD of the untreated digestate 29 g/L tCOD of treated digestate 48 g/L tCOD of feed WAS |
Sun et al. | Pretreatment with 10–50 mg Peracetic acid (PAA)/g SS and reaction time of 30 min | 20% increase in biogas with pretreatment by 30 mg PAA/g SS | Supernatant sCOD increased by 530% |
Tulun et al. | Chemical pretreatment at pH 2, pH 5, and pH 10 using H2SO4 for acid treatment and NaOH for alkaline pretreatment | 43% increase in BMP in pH 10, 60 °C and 15 min treatment time. | pH 2–194% increase in sCOD pH 5–567% increase in sCOD pH 10–708% increase in sCOD for 15 min pretreatment at 60 °C compared to untreated sludge |
Li et al. | Alkaline treatment using 0.005–0.5 mol/L NaOH on WAS | Increase in biogas production was insignificant for days greater than 8 at all pH and untreated sludge (<10 mL) | Increase in sCOD from 3000 mg/L for untreated to 6000 mg/L for pretreatment using 0.4 moles/L NaOH of 80% primary sludge and 20% biofilm sludge. |
Wei et al. | FA treatment maintaining 10 pH using NaOH at 25 °C | 160 L CH4/kg VS added for the untreated sludge in 50 days digestion time increased to ~185 L CH4/kg VS added for FA treatment at 250 mg NH3-N/L | 10 times increase in solubilization of sludge compared with control and ammonium treatment 0.025 mg/mg VS sCOD of control 0.4 mg/mg VS increase at pH 10, and FA concentration of 250 mg NH3-N/L |
Dewil et al. | Fenton reagent pretreatment at 5, 25, 50gH2O2/kg Dry Solids POMS and DMDO pretreatment at 30, 60 g/g DS and 330, 660 mL/kg DS respectively | Increase in specific biogas production from 644 for control to 668 mL/g ∆ODS for 50 mg/kg DS H2O2, 716 mL/g ∆ODS for 60 g/kgDS POMS, and 829 mL/g ∆ ODS for 660 mL/kg DS of DMDO | 187%, 405%, 595% increase in COD using 5, 25, 50 g H2O2/kg dry solids, respectively 385%, 506% increase in COD using 30, 60/g DS POMS respectively and 456%, 690% increase in COD using 330, 660 mL/kg DS DMDO compared to untreated sludge with 421 mg O2/L COD |
Yin et al. | Use of fungal mash as enzyme pretreatment on activated sludge and mixture of activated sludge and food waste | Net methane production increased from 240 to 367 mL/g VS after pretreatment fungal mash on activated sludge | 220% more sCOD in pretreated co-digestion than untreated activated sludge |
Song et al. | Temperature phased AD at single stages mesophilic temperature (35 °C) and thermophilic temperature (55 °C), and a co-phase AD system of mesophilic and thermophilic digester | Specific methane yield of 450 mL/g VS removed for single stage mesophilic temperature and mesophilic-thermophilic co-phase digestion while 416 mL/g VS removed for single staged thermophilic temperature. | sCOD of 2555 mg/L for single phased mesophilic, 5240 mg/L for single phased thermophilic treatment, 2100–2200 and 1700–2900 mg/L for co-phase mesophilic-thermophilic digesters |
Healy et al. | Comparison of two phased and temperature phased AD of MSW and PS Thermophilic temperature of 55 °C followed by mesophilic temperature of 35 °C, pH 5.6 for first system of two phased system while pH 7 of the first stage of temperature phased reactor on mixture of OFMSW and PS | Maximum methane production rate of 0.4 L/gVS for temperature phase system and 0.3 L/g VS for two-phase system | 64% particulate COD removal from temperature phased system and 65% particulate COD removal from two phase system on sludge mixture of 60% OFMSW and 40% PS |
Mehari et al. | Temperature phased biological hydrolysis at 4255 °C, combination of 42 °C followed by 55 °C, and 55 °C followed by 42 °C and thermal hydrolysis at 165 °C for 30 min | Biological hydrolysis at 55 °C followed by 42 °C 23% higher methane production Untreated sludge and thermal treatment enhanced methane production by 20%. | sCOD increased by a maximum of 377% by thermal hydrolysis followed by biological hydrolysis at 55 °C which increased sCOD by 324% |
Wett et al. | Ball milling (55 kW with specific demand of 0.49 kWh/kg TSS and thermal hydrolysis as pretreatment methods on Low loaded WAS. Thermo-pressure Hydrolysis (TDH) at a pressure of 19–21 bar, 170–180 °C for 60 min | TDH produced 75% more biogas and ball milling produced 41% more biogas compared to untreated sludge | COD was enhanced from 33% for untreated to 44% using ball milling and to 51% using TDH treatment. |
Nagler et al. | Thermo-chemical pretreatment on WAS using 1M NaOH, aluminate, and ash as alkaline reagents and temperatures ranging from 39–200 °C | 122% increase in biogas compared to the untreated sludge when treated at 70 °C and 0.04 M NaOH | COD disintegration of 34% compared to the control was achieved at 70 °C which was increased by 50% when 0.08 M NaOH was used. |
Yi et al. | Comparison of alkaline, thermal + alkaline treatment on WAS at 0.05–0.25 g NaOH/g TS for 2 and 9 h | 630% increase in biogas at 0.05 g NaOH pretreatment for 24 h and thermal treatment at 70 °C for 9 h compared to control | sCOD increased by 2 times at 0.05 g NaOH, by 17 times at 0.05 g NaOH and 70 °C for 2 h, and by 226 times at 0.05 g NaOH, 70 °C and 9 h. |
Valo et al. | Thermal + oxidative pretreatment at 130 °C and pH10 using 1.65 g/dm3 KOH | 74% increase in biogas compared to untreated sludge | tCOD removal increased by 37% compared to raw WAS |
Pretreatment | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applicability in WWTP |
---|---|---|---|
MECHANICAL | |||
Ultrasonication | High degree of solubilization Biogas production High solids removal | High energy requirement High investment cost Degradation of electrodes | Commercialized, Vendors: Biosonator Sonix Heizcher |
Microwave | Improved sludge disintegration Low reaction time | High investment And operation cost | Lab scale application only |
High pressure homogenization | Short reaction time Increased sludge disintegration | High investment and operation cost Degradation of equipment | Commercialized, Vendors: Crown Process Cellruptor |
THERMAL | |||
Low temperature | Solids reduction achieved with low operation | Long treatment time | Lab and pilot scale |
High temperature | Short contact time Higher solids reduction achieved compared to low temperature treatment | High operation cost High energy requirement Recalcitrant compounds formation | Commercialized, Vendors: CambiTHP Biothelys Exelys |
CHEMICAL | |||
Acid/alkaline | Excellent sludge disintegration | Additional cost for chemicals Digester instability due to pH | Lab scale |
Ozone | Improve sludge hydrolysis High solids reduction | High investment and operation cost | Commercialized, Vendors: Aspal Sludge Praxair Lyso Biolysis O-Process |
Fenton’s reagent | Low investment and operating cost compared to ozonation Easy to use Sludge disintegration | Chemical cost, Low pH requirement, Hydroxyl scavenging | Lab scale |
Trace metal nutrients | Some sludge disintegration VS solids reduction Increase in methanogenesis | Cost for chemicals Not widely studied | Lab scale |
BIOLOGICAL | |||
Enzyme addition | Lysis of recalcitrant compounds TS, COD reduction | Specificity on enzyme High cost on enzyme purchase | Lab scale |
Temperature phased AD | Low operating cost | Long reaction time Limited research for analysis | Lab scale |
Integrated Pretreatment | |||
Mechanical-thermal | Low energy required compared to single pretreatment High solids reduction | High energy demand | Full scale |
Mechanical chemical | Higher solids reduction achieved medium cost for chemicals and lower energy requirement compared to individual pretreatment | Additional chemicals required | Commercialized, Vendor: Microsludge process |
Thermal chemical | Increased solids removal Low thermal energy required compared to thermal only | Cost for chemicals High energy demand Recalcitrant compound formation | Commercialized, Vendors: Krepro Process |
Treatment | Method | Capital Cost | Electricity Generation | Disposal Cost | Net Saving | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thermochemical | 70 °C and 0.04 M NaOH | 22% ↑ | 22% ↑ | 27%↓ | 21% ↑ | [61] |
Alkaline-mechanical | pH 13, 90 min reaction time + crushing device for | $556,000 | 5 times↑ | 40%↓ | 40% ↑ | [65] |
Ultrasound † | 1000 kJ/kg TSS | $20 ↑ | N/A | 55$ ↓ | $54 ↑ | [68] |
Thermal † | 70 °C | $43 ↑ | N/A | $55 ↓ | $67 ↑ | [68] |
Ultrasound-thermal † | 1000 kJ/kg TSS + 70 °C | $63 ↑ | N/A | $63 ↓ | $51 ↑ | [68] |
Thermochemical ozone δ | 0.0004 mg O3/mg SS to 0.0016 mg O3/mg SS, 50–100 °C, 0.1 N NaOH | $7 ↑ | N/A | $139 ↓ | $36 ↑ | [69] |
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Shrestha, B.; Hernandez, R.; Fortela, D.L.B.; Sharp, W.; Chistoserdov, A.; Gang, D.; Revellame, E.; Holmes, W.; Zappi, M.E. A Review of Pretreatment Methods to Enhance Solids Reduction during Anaerobic Digestion of Municipal Wastewater Sludges and the Resulting Digester Performance: Implications to Future Urban Biorefineries. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 9141. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10249141
Shrestha B, Hernandez R, Fortela DLB, Sharp W, Chistoserdov A, Gang D, Revellame E, Holmes W, Zappi ME. A Review of Pretreatment Methods to Enhance Solids Reduction during Anaerobic Digestion of Municipal Wastewater Sludges and the Resulting Digester Performance: Implications to Future Urban Biorefineries. Applied Sciences. 2020; 10(24):9141. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10249141
Chicago/Turabian StyleShrestha, Bimi, Rafael Hernandez, Dhan Lord B. Fortela, Wayne Sharp, Andrei Chistoserdov, Daniel Gang, Emmanuel Revellame, William Holmes, and Mark E. Zappi. 2020. "A Review of Pretreatment Methods to Enhance Solids Reduction during Anaerobic Digestion of Municipal Wastewater Sludges and the Resulting Digester Performance: Implications to Future Urban Biorefineries" Applied Sciences 10, no. 24: 9141. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10249141
APA StyleShrestha, B., Hernandez, R., Fortela, D. L. B., Sharp, W., Chistoserdov, A., Gang, D., Revellame, E., Holmes, W., & Zappi, M. E. (2020). A Review of Pretreatment Methods to Enhance Solids Reduction during Anaerobic Digestion of Municipal Wastewater Sludges and the Resulting Digester Performance: Implications to Future Urban Biorefineries. Applied Sciences, 10(24), 9141. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10249141