Helo   
   Dear and respected Keith addison
 
    Thank you very much for your latest excellent  INFORMATION ABOUT 
INTEGERATION OF COMPOSTING AND BIODIGESTION.In this regard, Bate work and your 
observations are very relavent  important  one to rethink  and well 
understanding  for all  who want to work with  biogas technology.
        There are significant material loss in aerobic composting upto  20 
porcent as CO2.
Hence our approach not  included this step, but use anerobic process using  the 
anerobic bacteria in the effluent , growing this bacterias and   recycling the 
same to  render  polymeric degradation.This  bioprocess pretreatment is to 
accelerate   the  methane biodigestion. From your observation and  Bate work 
,precomposting at high temperature   can  be also as effetive as our approach 
and we will include this  in our future design. This three stage process  of 
aerobic thermofilic composting , anerobic hydrolysis , followed  by  
biodigestion  can treat all type  of the  wastes in to fuel , if properly 
understood, designed and operated .
          Excellent low cost  accelerated  composting work is going on in 
brasil  related with garbage, if any one need we can  pass on the relevent 
information, thus possible to include into  biogas projects.
    More over  the biogas tecnology can be also used to transform impure gas 
co, co2  and H2 pyrolysis  or wood gasification  very easily tranformed into 
methane.
Thus mehane will be  real economic  and ecologuically correct fuel  , can 
easily combined togther with  other biodiesel, biooil and alcohol .
 
          Thank you  again for  brinking the excellent practical work of Bate  
to our group .The BIOGAS  is not the fuel of the future , but it has potencial  
for the present annd future  not only for the poor country but also the 
developed one,  as this make it  possible wealth from waste.We need  to make 
this fact spread all over the world by  bringing together all our group 
expererience together, so that  ALL CAN HAVE THE BIOMASS ENERGY  WITH GREAT 
GREEN FUTURE WITHOUT NEED FOR WAR , BUT  BRINGING PEACE  TO  GLOBALIZED WORLD.
   LET ALL THE MEMBER OF THE BIOFUEL JOINT HAND TOWARDS  THIS  END WITH  THE 
DEDICATED WORK OF OUR BELOVED  KEITH ADDISION. LET US JOIN  TO MAKE THIS AS BIG 
MOVIMENTS.
 
   BEST WISHES AND SUCCES  
 
SD 
Pannirselvam
 
 

Keith Addison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Dear Pannirselvam

>Dear and respected  Keith  Addision
>
>   Thank you  very much about your keen interest about biogas 
>technology  developments.Your  constant help about  several internet 
>useful link are making us to learn a lot.i am very sorry not very 
>clear some points
>     I beleive  the sucess of any group depends on the person who 
>need to be not only co-ordinator , doorman , but above all  the 
>leadership quality too , because all of us are participating 
>voluentary work.

... well, okay... :-)

>The group is  moving in correct direction .

That's the important bit, thankyou!

>       Solid residues from food , agricultural wastes and  any 
>vegatable wastes are  made of  natural polymeric materials such asd 
>cellulose, lignin and hemicellulose .They are  dificult to be 
>attacked by microbes OR ENZYMES , thus need long time for 
>bioderadation  and  hence need  treatments befor biodegradations. 
>Mecanical, themal , chemical treatments used before biodigestion are 
>known as pretreatments.
>       Biogas can be poduced  form lingocellulosics  but need 120 
>days, thus not economically desirable.
>       Biodigestion  is possible using some solid residues  examplo, 
>food waste   as  it is , without any need for pretreatments , but 
>fibrous and  woody residues need to be pretreated to improve  the 
>process.

Why not pre-composting? I'm not nearly as familiar (yet) with biogas 
as with composting, but I think the parameters are similar except for 
aeration and moisture content. More intractable materials will break 
down very rapidly in a thermophyllic (hot) compost pile if the 
overall C:N ratio is somewhere between 25:1 and 35:1, moisture 
content about 65-70% and with a plentiful air supply (preferably from 
underneath). Such a compost pile will reach at least 60 deg C (or 
much more) in a day or two; a few days to a week under such 
conditions would prepare such materials for a biogas digester, only 
requiring increased moisture content.

Mechanical treatment would be shredding to increase the surface area, 
and perhaps stirring to increase aeration. With composting both these 
can be useful but are certainly not necessary.

It seems you're managing to treat food wastes directly without 
pre-treatment because the C:N ratio is already within the correct 
parameters; cellulose material needs the addition of nitrogenous 
material, such as manure, fresh green plants, etc. Correcting the C:N 
ratio might be simpler and more economical than pre-treatments.

I think pre-treatments would be an extra step, a deterrent to the 
technology being taken up at local level. Adjusting the C:N ratio 
first and/or pre-composting might also seem to be such a deterrent, 
but I believe biogas and composting should go together as a package 
for optimum results - it could be presented as a simplifying rather 
than a complicating factor. Even without a need for pre-composting, 
composting is needed for post-treatment of the sludge before it can 
be used safely as a soil amendment, and to ensure reliable cut-off of 
the pathogens, if human and/or animal manure is being used as a 
feedstock. Composting can also provide a heat source to maintain the 
biogas digester at the optimum temperature (probably mesophyllic).

Much more about composting here:
http://journeytoforever.org/compost.html

>     We will be surely give full details  in future , as yet our 
>design work is going on very slowly.

Good, no hurry.

regards

Keith


> sd
>Pannisrselvam
>
>
>
>Keith Addison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hello Pannirselvam
>
> >Hello Eong and Keith addision
> >
> >    Thank you  for your keen interest  about the  more discussion of
> >biogas here in  yahoo biofuel group , which our small  research
> >group in Brasil also believes too have good green future , in
> >addition to bio oil and bidiesel of real  energy economy where as H2
> >will be the virtual one using this real energy carrier .The simple
> >bioreactor can also recover energy from  waste of urban ,
> >agricultural and animal  of alltypes , including the glycerine and
> >ester , if properly designed.
>
>We're working on integrating biogas digestion and composting (hot
>compost, aerobic, thermophyllic) along with biofuels production - I
>think they all fit together very well, and can be adapted to fit
>almost anywhere, with or without the biofuels production bit, as
>required.
>
> >    Our group  is designing  biodigester horizontal rectangular
> >tanque WITH locally made bricks or sand ciment blocks, covered
> >rectangular plasic sheet suported by plastic nets all housed under
> >rectangular wooden box, all to making use of local materials and
> >manpower.
>
>Do you have any photographs, or drawings? What are the capacities,
>production, etc?
>
> >       The gas generated can be compreesed  and put in gas cylinder
> >of cooking gas, all are available in all the  place of Brasil.
>
>How do you compress it? Small-scale compression seems to be an
>obstacle - if it could easily be overcome then we could include
>methane as a mobile fuel as well as a static energy source. As here,
>for instance - Robert referred to this link:
>
>http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel_library/methane_bate.html
>Put a chicken in your tank
>
>This is from one of the stories about Harold Bate:
>
>"Bate has fitted his digester tank with a safety valve set for 60
>p.s.i. "just in case". Pressures in the extractor seldom reach a
>third that level, however, because Harold considers a digester
>internal pressure of 20 p.s.i. to be the signal to start up a
>high-pressure compressor (of the type used for filling aqualung
>diving bottles) and pump the collected gas from the extractor into an
>ordinary high-pressure bottle.
>
>"A filter between the digester and pressure bottle extracts the small
>quantities of phosphoric acid and ammonia that are present and the
>remaining almost-pure methane liquefies at a pressure of 1110 p.s.i.
>
>"Bate finds that it takes about one-half hour of steady pumping to
>fill a 32-pound (4.5 Imperial gallon) bottle to its capacity of
>liquid methane. This figures out to approximately 200 cubic feet of
>dry gas... or a fuel equivalent of seven gallons of good petrol
>(about eight and three-quarter gallon of high-test gasoline, to
>readers in the US)..."
>
>Is this feasible locally, or something like it?
>
> >         The solid resdiues are fermented  aerobically after milling
> >using seleted strain of fungus to accelerate composting using little
> >urea, then  the composted materials are solubilzed  using bacterias
> >grown  with the solution of the out put of the biodigesters.
> >
> >     THIS TWO STAGE BIOLOGICAL PRETREATMENTS CAN BE EASILY
> >IMPLEMENTED TO MAKE FUEL FROM BIODEGRABLE SOLID RESIDUES ,
> >AGRICULTURAL, URBAN AND  ANIMAL WASTES.
>
>Sorry, I don't understand this - solid residues? You mean the manure
>etc? What is the purpose of the pretreatment? Is it really necessary
>- why not just put it straight into the digester?
>
> >    The compressed biogas can easily suppliment with biodisel and
> >bioiol made from bimass in rural areas.This can be aapropriate
> >ecological solution under  developing  stage by our small research
> >groups.
> >
> >   Technical colaborations are welcome to make our research sucess.
> >Our project has finished the design stage, will be soon implemented
> >and operated both de biogas  and together with biooil project of
> >lower cost for small scale  power generations.In addition we wish to
> >make biodeisel from bio oil from wood.
> >
> >  Thanks again our group leader,to make our group one of the best
> >working group of biofuel, who really move the discussion in correct
> >directions for real world problems.
>
>Thankyou! But you're too generous, I'm not a leader, just the doorman
>really. :-)
>
> >I also feel that this group is doing a lot to make  deveoped
> >countries  technical experiences to developing one to make  great
> >green future for biofuel and all our group members to
>
>That's a very important goal for me, I really hope it's true.
>
>Best wishes
>
>Keith
>
>
> >sd
> >
> >Pannirselvam
> >
> >
> >                 Two reactor in batch operations  need tecnical
> >skill, when one is not operating , other need to be cleaned  and
> >charged with raw materials,
> >
> >                T
> >
> >Keith Addison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Hello Eong and Pannirselvam
> >
> >Could you provide a description of the technologies you're using?
> >
> >I'd welcome more discussion of biogas issues and technologies - we do
> >have it, but not enough, IMO. Very much on-topic here. Recent
> >discussion on the composition of "natural gas" (LPG) and other
> >sources of methane came close.
> >
> >We've discussed these before, among others - bag digesters:
> >
> >http://www.ias.unu.edu/proceedings/icibs/ibs/info/ecuador/install-p 
>olydig.htm
> >How to install a polyethylene biogas plant
> >
> >http://www.fao.org/WAICENT/FAOINFO/AGRICULT/AGA/AGAP/FRG/Recycle/biodi
> >g/manual.htm
> >Biodigester installation manual
> >
> >Are your units similar?
> >
> >Re locally available raw materials, I wonder what could be adpated to
> >serve the purpose of a polyethylene bag... When you see something
> >like this it seems anything's possible!
> >http://www.manalagi.com/jamesplace/indonesia/sopi/index.html
> >Culture Corner Archive: Makin' Moonshine
> >
> > >     Our university research group situated in the the city o Natal,
> > >Northeast of Brazil ina na under developed area of Brazil,
> > >different  than the economically  developed area of the  south of
> > >Brazil ,  under my coordination have  technical resource  for the
> > >new  low cost design  for  biogas from  solid residues regarding
> > >inovative design..We   wish to  lend helping hand to  have joint
> > >effort  to solve  the problems there and our research students wish
> > >to lend the helping hand also to you.
> > >   I thank the  leader of this  biofuel group , who does  a lot  to
> > >bring the people all over the world  and  do very seroius  work  and
> > >wish to thank  all of them related to biofuel   for the very serious
> > >work. Let us join hand help each other by sharing our technical
> > >experiences.
> >
> >Indeed yes, that's exactly what it's for!
> >
> >Best wishes
> >
> >Keith Addison
> >
> > >sd
> > >
> > >Pannirselvam
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >ONG San Guan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > >Hi,
> > > >
> > > >I am sourcing for biogas technologies using human or animal 
>excreta as the
> > > >raw material in remote highlands of the Mekong Water Shed Region
> >( Myanmar,
> > > >Laos, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Provinces of Western China 
>like Tibet,
> > > >Sichuan, Yunnan and Guangxi ). Present ones in use may succumb to SARS
> > > >epidemic threat.  One other factor is the use of local raw material for
> > > >building the equipment; indigenous wood and bamboo are plenty in
> >that area.
> > > >
> > > >Any input would be appreciated........EONG



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