I agree completely with Duncan, we use VS mostly because it is so simple to 
measure and when combined with a little experience we can often make a 
reasonable guess at the biogas yield. I and many others have tried to make 
accurate predictions of biogas yield with a large number of parameters, 
including in vitro digestibility but the results are not particularly good, at 
least not yet.
Regarding the statement that manure cannot serve as food for methanogens, this 
is completely untrue, as any manure-only digester can prove. The reason there 
is interest in manure digestion is simple. We know that manure is a fairly poor 
substrate for biogas, but anaerobic digestion is primarily a method of treating 
manure and recycling nutrients whilst simultaneously giving a useful bi-product 
called biogas. We are well aware that food wastes, i.e. feedstocks from which 
animals have not taken their share, would significantly increase biogas 
production when compared to second-hand feedstocks like manure. The problem is 
that once there is a demand for "wastes" they start to command a price.

Med venlig hilsen / Regards
Alastair James Ward



________________________________
From: digestion-boun...@lists.bioenergylists.org 
[mailto:digestion-boun...@lists.bioenergylists.org] On Behalf Of Duncan Martin
Sent: 15. oktober 2010 10:28
To: For Discussion of Anaerobic Digestion
Subject: Re: [Digestion] Attachment to previous Article - More scientific based 
research and questions

Much of what Dr Karve writes here would, in broad terms, be accepted by many 
biogas workers.

VS is a crude (but easy) measure of total organic content - whether or not 
biodegradable, aerobically or anaerobically.

BOD is (by definition!) a measure of the biodegradable content amenable to 
fairly quick aerobic breakdown.

So neither is a good measure of anaerobic biodegradability. However, for a 
given kind of feedstock, the correlation with anaerobic biodegradability will 
be fairly constant, so they can be convenient ways of assaying feed 
concentration. The mistake is to expect the same biogas yields per kg of VS or 
of BOD from a different feedstock.

I also agree that the use of an aerobic step predecing an anaerobic one makes 
very little sense.

Yes, the gut methanogens do, in a sense, eat what the animal eats. However, it 
would be more accurate to say that their diet is derived from what the animal 
eats. The methanogens in the gut of a cow are surrounded by celluose and other 
biopolymers but they cannot digest them. They live on the waste products of 
other microbial processes. The web of metabolic interactions is well known.

Where I would "hoot out" Dr Karve is his belief that dung cannot serve as food 
for the methanogens because they are "thrown out" of the body along with the 
dung. I don't understand the logic here.

Firstly, the words "thrown out" are misleading. They imply a 'deliberate' 
rejection, in the sense that it is somehow beneficial. But it isn't. Retaining 
the bugs would save the nutrients need to keep replacing those lost in the 
dung. In fact, the methanogens are inevitably lost with the dung because they 
are intimately mixed with the gut content.

If evolution could figure out a separation process or suitable biomass support, 
no doubt we would have ruminants with fixed-bed digesters in their guts, rather 
than CSTRs and plug flow digester hybrids we see in reality. Such "high-tech" 
animals would produce much less dung, with very low energy content. However, 
evolution has favoured a simpler and more 'generous' path: eat more, shit more 
- and leave a bit for the next guy in the food chain!

Secondly, the retention time in the gut of an animal is limited. Monogastric 
herbivores eat large volumes of vegetation and digest it inefficiently, so 
their dung has a high level of residual energy content - hence high biogas 
yields. Ruminants digest less good but more efficiently, with a longer 
retention time, so their dung has a lower level of residual energy content - 
hence lower biogas yields. But far from zero.

The methanogens in dung have not finished 'eating' - they have just had their 
dinner rudely interrupted by the act of defaecation - and the consequent 
exposure to oxygen. Put them in AD plant and they will continue their dinner 
for several weeks.

Duncan Martin
Cloughjordan Ecovillage
Ireland


On 15 October 2010 05:37, Anand Karve 
<adka...@gmail.com<mailto:adka...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Dear Alex,
I give below the philosophy of our biogas work. Our first assumption is that 
because the methanogenic archaea reside in the guts of animals, they eat what 
the animals eat. Our second assumption is that these organisms are universally 
found in the fecal matter of animals because they are thrown out of the body 
along with the dung. Therefore we do not accept that dung serves as food for 
the methanogenic archaea. In fact, it is mentioned in the textbooks on biogas 
technology that several species of bacteria are involved in reducing the dung 
to acetic acid and that the methanogens turn the acetic acid into methane. Our 
third assumption is that using the terms VS and BOD to describe the feedstock 
are wrong. Neither of these parameters is correlated with the quantity of the 
biogas generated. The use of these parameters in biogas work is comparable to 
using the phlogiston theory in chemistry. We therefore propose that 
digestibility of the feedstock be considered as the correct parameter to 
describe the feedstock. Methods are available to determine the in vitro dry 
matter digestibility (IVDMD) and these values are available in books on cattle 
fodder. We ask the users of our biogas plants to ask themselves the question if 
the feedstock would be digested by animals. If the answer is yes, it is the 
right feedstock. We also feel that the fetish of C/N ratio should be discarded. 
We have operated our biogas system for months on end, using only green leaves, 
or oilseed cake, which have a C/N value of less than 10, some time as low as 5.
We make only sparing use of a biphasic system. In fact, my advice is to avoid 
the use of a biphasic system. In a biphasic system, in order to break down the 
difficult to digest material, one makes use of an aerobic fermenter. In this 
phase, a lot of the easy to digest material, which would have yielded methane 
in the anaerobic phase, is lost, being converted into carbon dioxide.
You can now understand, why the biogas workers hoot me out and don't believe in 
me.
Yours
A.D.Karve

On 07/10/2010 01:39, Alexander Eaton wrote:
Dr Karve,

Your innovation and work in the field is quite appreciated, and your system 
really opens doors for us who are also not technically focused in the biology 
of biogas, but rather its application to families and communities.  That is why 
it seems your use of food waste and loading rates based on gas production for a 
family really widens the populations we may be able to work with globally.  Do 
you have a paper or document that has this data and other user data available?

Best,

Alex


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