Paul,

On 10/7/2011 5:41 PM, Paul Harris wrote:
G'day All,

David House's book "The biogas handbook" has a bit about carbon and charcoal 
and he does not seem to expect any assistance, possibly inhibition. I guess a lot depends 
on how the carbon is prepared and what the substrate may be.

Appreciate the mention, Paul, and I hope you are well.

I assume you are referring to pp. 65-66, where some work done in 1971 by Laura and Idnani (Increased Production of Biogas from Cowdung by Adding Other Agricultural Waste Materials. J. of the Sciences of Food and Agriculture 22:164) is discussed:

   "Oddly, the addition of either leguminous leaves alone (peas,
   alfalfa) or non-leguminous leaves alone did not stimulate biogas
   production very much, although there was some result. The addition
   of cane sugar alone, or what they refer to as "sarson oil cake"
   alone, or filter paper (essentially pure cellulose) alone, had no
   effect on the total amount of gas produced. Ashes and charcoal
   both reduced gas production, charcoal rather dramatically.
   (Although some researchers claim that activated charcoal helps
   city sewage digestion and gas production.)"


I agree with you that the source of and method for producing the charcoal will very likely have an impact on the result. (In my current project-- a 10 cu m food waste digester in a solar greenhouse-- if I can find a good source I have been planning to use bamboo charcoal, for reasons that I will not mention here since I may well be wrong...)

Of course, several steps in the biogas process are rate-limited, particularly (depending on substrate) the first stage, hydrolysis. For this and other reasons, /if the mode of action is focused on methanogenisis/, I would not expect dramatic improvements in the rate of gas production, particularly on the rate of methane production. However, whereas as I believe you indicated biofilms will have a lot of surface to colonize in most substrates that have any solid material, nevertheless it would seem that if the charcoal were in a mesh bag and anchored near the inlet to a digester, colonization of incoming substrates would take place at an accelerated rate. Where the bitty buddies get started faster, then it would stand to reason that the whole process would be somewhat accelerated, although I doubt I will be seeing a 3x increase.

Some other possible modes of action have already been mentioned, but I might just draw a distinction between absorption and adsorption; the latter is more of a surface phenomena, and may in some way assist the utilization of fatty acids because they would tend to be oriented similarly across a surface... I am only speculating, however.



d.
--
David William House
"The Complete Biogas Handbook" |www.completebiogas.com|
/Vahid Biogas/, an alternative energy consultancy |www.vahidbiogas.com

|
"Make no search for water.       But find thirst,
And water from the very ground will burst."
(Rumi, a Persian mystic poet, quoted in /Delight of Hearts/, p. 77)

http://bahai.us/
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