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Co-Digestion of Petroleum Sludge and Buffalo Dung by Batch Anaerobic Digestion System

Authors :
Muhammad Safar Korai
Munawar Ali Pinjaro
Zulfiqar Ali Bhatti
Eva Hertnacaahyani Herraprastanti
Miandad Jatoi
Muhammad Ali Shar
Abdulaziz Alhazaa
Source :
Journal of Ecological Engineering, Vol 25, Iss 6, Pp 120-127 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Polish Society of Ecological Engineering (PTIE), 2024.

Abstract

Globally, the petroleum industry plays a very significant role in producing oil to fill full the demand of the overgrowing population. The improper management of abandoned quantity of petroleum sludge that is one of the byproducts of petroleum industry has posed many environmental as well as socio-economic issues in most of the developing countries. The petroleum sludge contains various toxic substances like minerals, oil, and other chemicals which are very harmful for biotic as well as abiotic environment. Meanwhile, a huge quantity of livestock manure, especially buffalo dung, is produced in villages and burned as fuel after drying in open atmosphere for domestic application without any treatment which generates indoor air pollution. This study was formulated to analysis the biochemical methane potential of buffalo dung with petroleum sludge at different mixing ratios (i.e., 1:1, 1.5:0.5 and 0.5:1.5) through batch digestion system. The substrates were prepared and characterized before and after batch digestion by using standard methodology. The maximum methane was obtained as 268Nml/gVS, followed by 326Nml/gVS and 191Nml/gVS at mixing ratio of 1:1, 1.5:0.5 and 0.5:1.5 respectively. The results and finding of study lead to recommend that the codigestion of buffalo dung with petroleum sludge at mixing ratio of 1.5:0.5 through continuous batch digestion would be best option to enhance methane production.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22998993
Volume :
25
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Ecological Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.46ac1f99de8c47ec8ab8348e18937223
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.12911/22998993/186898