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Biological Nitrogen Potential (BNP): A New Methodology to Estimate Nitrogen Transformations During Anaerobic Digestion of Organic Substrates
- Source :
- Waste and Biomass Valorization, Waste and Biomass Valorization, Springer, 2020, 11 (2), pp.525-537. ⟨10.1007/s12649-019-00683-0⟩
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.
-
Abstract
- International audience; In this paper, nitrogen transformations were studied on 13 substrates from agro-industrial, agricultural or urban sources using a new method. This method was developed to determine the kinetics and balance of nitrogen transformation during anaerobic digestion with high inoculum-to-substrate ratio while avoiding instabilities with nutrients addition. Inoculum was washed to reduce ammonium content and carbonates were added to adjust buffer capacity. Results show that kinetics of nitrogen mineralisation depends mainly on initial substrate. Nitrogen was quickly transformed before stabilisation (from 2 to 8 days). Four types of nitrogen transformation were identified: (a) rapid mineralisation (transformation of organic nitrogen (Norg) into ammonium) for blood, (b) moderate mineralisation, for sludge, green waste and food waste, (c) limited protein hydrolysis (no transformation of nitrogen forms) for slurry and manure and, (d) immobilisation of nitrogen (transformation of ammonium into Norg (biomass growth)) for fruits, straw and greases. Biological nitrogen potential (BNP) ranged from ' 7.1 to 22.8 gN kgWW'1 and showed a good correlation (R2 = 0.80) with Norg from substrates. On co-digestion tests, no significant inhibitions of mineralisation nor synergies between substrates were assessed allowing to calculate BNP value of the mix as the weighting average of the BNP values of each added substrate. Examples of calculation of nitrogen form on digestate show that do not use BNP may induce to under or overestimations of the final NH4 + content. A comparison of this methodology with an already published methodology shows an excellent correlation but a systematic difference of 7.2 gN kgWW'1, which seems to be explained by a better capacity of the methodology developed in this study to describe immobilisation phenomena. © 2019, Springer Nature B.V.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
Environmental Engineering
020209 energy
ANAEROBIC DIGESTION
MINERALISATION
Biomass
chemistry.chemical_element
02 engineering and technology
01 natural sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
NITROGEN TRANSFORMATIONS
010608 biotechnology
11. Sustainability
0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering
Ammonium
Waste Management and Disposal
KINETICS
MINERALOGY
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
ORGANIC FERTILISATION
PROTEIN HYDROLYSIS
NITROGEN MINERALISATION
MINERALISATION POTENTIAL
SUBSTRATES
Straw
DIGESTATE
INOCULUM TO SUBSTRATE RATIOS
Manure
Nitrogen
6. Clean water
NITROGEN
Green waste
FERTILISATION
Anaerobic digestion
chemistry
Environmental chemistry
FERTILIZERS
[SDE]Environmental Sciences
Digestate
ENZYME KINETICS
IMMOBILISATION
NITROGEN IMMOBILISATION
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1877265X and 18772641
- Volume :
- 11
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Waste and Biomass Valorization
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....762c843b67d3a8341438b6fab0d18474