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Cassava starch extraction effluent treatment in a one phase tubular horizontal pilot reactor with support medium

Tratamento de efluente de fecularia em reator anaeróbio tubular horizontal piloto com meio suporte

Abstracts

The cassava starch industries generate a large volume of wastewater effluent that, stabilized in ponds, wastes its biogas energy and pollutes the atmosphere. To contribute with the reversion of this reality, this manipueira treatment research was developed in one phase anaerobic horizontal pilot reactor with support medium in bamboo pieces. The reactor was excavated into the ground and sealed with geomembrane in HDPE, having a volume equal to 33.6 m³ and continuous feeding by gravity. The stability indicators were pH, volatile acidity/total alkalinity ratio and biogas production. The statistical analyses were performed by a completely randomized design, with answers submitted to multivariate analysis. The organical loads in COD were 0.556; 0.670; 0.678 and 0.770 g L-1 and in volatile solids (VS) of 0.659; 0.608; 0.570 and 0.761 g L-1 for the hydraulic retention times (HRT) of 13.0; 11.5; 10.0 and 7.0 days, respectively. The reductions in COD were 88; 80; 88 and 67% and for VS of 76; 77; 65 and 61%. The biogas productions relatively to the consumed COD were 0.368; 0.795; 0.891 and 0.907 Lg-1, for the consumed VS of 0.524; 0.930; 1.757 and 0.952 Lg-1 and volumetric of 0.131; 0.330; 0.430 and 0.374 L L-1 d-1. The reactor remained stable and the bamboo pieces, in visual examination at the end of the experiment, showed to be in good physical conditions.

biodigester; biogas; anaerobic digestion; cassava; cassava wastewater


As fecularias produzem grande volume de manipueira que, estabilizado em lagoas, provoca desperdício da energia do biogás e a poluição da atmosfera. Para contribuir com a reversão dessa realidade, desenvolveu-se esta pesquisa de tratamento de manipueira de fecularia em reator anaeróbio tubular horizontal piloto, com meio suporte, em peças de bambu. O reator foi escavado no solo e impermeabilizado com geomembrana, com volume de 33,6 m³ e alimentação contínua por gravidade. Os indicadores de estabilidade foram pH, relação acidez volátil/alcalinidade total e produção de biogás. O delineamento experimental foi o inteiramente casualizado, com respostas submetidas à análise multivariada. As cargas orgânicas em termos de demanda química de oxigênio (DQO) foram de 0,556; 0,670; 0,678 e 0,770 g L-1 e em sólidos voláteis (SV) de 0,659; 0,608; 0,570 e 0,761 g L-1 para os tempos de retenção hidráulica (TRH) de 13,0; 11,5; 10,0 e 7,0 dias, respectivamente. As reduções médias de DQO foram de 88; 80; 88 e 67% e de SV de 76; 77; 65 e 61%, respectivamente. As produções de biogás por DQO consumida foram de 0,368; 0,795; 0,891 e 0,907 L g-1, por SV consumidos de 0,524; 0,930; 1,757 e 0,952 L g-1 e volumétrica de 0,131; 0,330; 0,430 e 0,374 L L-1 d-1. O reator permaneceu estável, e as peças de bambu, em análise visual ao final do experimento, apresentaram-se fisicamente íntegras.

biodigestor; biogás; digestão anaeróbia; mandioca; manipueira


SCIENTIFIC PAPERS

SANITATION AND AMBIENT CONTROL

Cassava starch extraction effluent treatment in a one phase tubular horizontal pilot reactor with support medium

Tratamento de efluente de fecularia em reator anaeróbio tubular horizontal piloto com meio suporte

Osvaldo KuczmanI; Maria H. F. TavaresII; Simone D. GomesIII; Luciana P. C. GuedesIV; Geovane GrisottiV

IEngenheiro Agrícola, Doutor em Engenharia Agrícola, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Engenharia Agrícola, UNIOESTE, Cascavel - PR, fone (45) 3038-7033, bioma@creapr.org.br

IIEngenheira Química, Profa. Dra., PGEAGRI/UNIOESTE, Cascavel - PR, fone (45)3220-3266, maria.tavares@unioeste.br

IIIEngenheira Agrônoma, Profa. Dra., PGEAGRI/UNIOESTE, Cascavel - PR, fone (45)3220-7413, simone.gomes@unioeste.br

IVMatemática, Profa. Dra., PGEAGRI/UNIOESTE, Cascavel - PR, fone (45)3220-7320, luciana_pagliosa@hotmail.com

VEngenheiro Agrícola, CCET/UNIOESTE, Cascavel - PR, fone (45)3220-3266, geovane_g23@hotmail.com

ABSTRACT

The cassava starch industries generate a large volume of wastewater effluent that, stabilized in ponds, wastes its biogas energy and pollutes the atmosphere. To contribute with the reversion of this reality, this manipueira treatment research was developed in one phase anaerobic horizontal pilot reactor with support medium in bamboo pieces. The reactor was excavated into the ground and sealed with geomembrane in HDPE, having a volume equal to 33.6 m3 and continuous feeding by gravity. The stability indicators were pH, volatile acidity/total alkalinity ratio and biogas production. The statistical analyses were performed by a completely randomized design, with answers submitted to multivariate analysis. The organical loads in COD were 0.556; 0.670; 0.678 and 0.770 g L-1 and in volatile solids (VS) of 0.659; 0.608; 0.570 and 0.761 g L-1 for the hydraulic retention times (HRT) of 13.0; 11.5; 10.0 and 7.0 days, respectively. The reductions in COD were 88; 80; 88 and 67% and for VS of 76; 77; 65 and 61%. The biogas productions relatively to the consumed COD were 0.368; 0.795; 0.891 and 0.907 Lg-1, for the consumed VS of 0.524; 0.930; 1.757 and 0.952 Lg-1 and volumetric of 0.131; 0.330; 0.430 and 0.374 L L-1 d-1. The reactor remained stable and the bamboo pieces, in visual examination at the end of the experiment, showed to be in good physical conditions.

Keywords: biodigester, biogas, anaerobic digestion, cassava, cassava wastewater

RESUMO

As fecularias produzem grande volume de manipueira que, estabilizado em lagoas, provoca desperdício da energia do biogás e a poluição da atmosfera. Para contribuir com a reversão dessa realidade, desenvolveu-se esta pesquisa de tratamento de manipueira de fecularia em reator anaeróbio tubular horizontal piloto, com meio suporte, em peças de bambu. O reator foi escavado no solo e impermeabilizado com geomembrana, com volume de 33,6 m3 e alimentação contínua por gravidade. Os indicadores de estabilidade foram pH, relação acidez volátil/alcalinidade total e produção de biogás. O delineamento experimental foi o inteiramente casualizado, com respostas submetidas à análise multivariada. As cargas orgânicas em termos de demanda química de oxigênio (DQO) foram de 0,556; 0,670; 0,678 e 0,770 g L-1 e em sólidos voláteis (SV) de 0,659; 0,608; 0,570 e 0,761 g L-1 para os tempos de retenção hidráulica (TRH) de 13,0; 11,5; 10,0 e 7,0 dias, respectivamente. As reduções médias de DQO foram de 88; 80; 88 e 67% e de SV de 76; 77; 65 e 61%, respectivamente. As produções de biogás por DQO consumida foram de 0,368; 0,795; 0,891 e 0,907 L g-1, por SV consumidos de 0,524; 0,930; 1,757 e 0,952 L g-1 e volumétrica de 0,131; 0,330; 0,430 e 0,374 L L-1 d-1. O reator permaneceu estável, e as peças de bambu, em análise visual ao final do experimento, apresentaram-se fisicamente íntegras.

Palavras-chave: biodigestor, biogás, digestão anaeróbia, mandioca, manipueira

INTRODUCTION

Originally from South America, cassava is one of the most important food for about 500 million people, being produced by more than 80 countries. Brazil participates with more than 15% of world production, taking the 2nd place in the world ranking (FAO, 2011).

Among the products derived from cassava, there is the starch whose manufacturing process generates high volume of effluent (cassava) with high organic load resulted from the dissolution of organic compounds, unbalancing the natural resources (CHAVALPARIT & ONGWANDEE, 2009). The organic compounds present in the cassava are highly susceptible to anaerobic biological treatment (SUN et al., 2012). The effluent also carries the starch from the equipment washing, which typically follows for biological treatment in ponds. The ponds emit methane, resulting in wasted energy. On the other hand, the industry buys electricity to operate the productive process and fuel for drying the starch, reducing the profitability of the activity. Treated in anaerobic reactors the efluent produces biogas, which can be used for electricity production (MARTINS & OLIVEIRA, 2011) or hot air for drying the starch.

Considering the aspects noted above, this research was carried out to evaluate the treatment of effluent of cassava starch production in a pilot horizontal anaerobic reacto with support mean, using the hydraulic retention times (HRT) of 13.0; 11.5; 10.0 and 7.0 days.

MATERIAL AND METHODS

In a starch manufacturer, located in West Paraná, Brazil, it was constructed and operated a pilot anaerobic tubular horizontal flow reactor with continuous gravity feeding. The fermentation chamber, excavated in the soil, with trapezoidal section in both the transverse and longitudinal directions and the background without slope, had the following dimensions: upper length 10.80 m, lower length 9.80 m, upper width 2.30 m, bottom width 1.30 m and depth of 2.10 m, with a total volume of 33.6 m3. The sealing of the chamber and the gasometer were performed with high density polyethylene geomembrane (HDPG), with a thickness of 1.25 mm. Polypropylene bags (45 aerated bags with wide mesh) were stacked as support mean for microorganisms, containing 9,000 bamboo pieces with length of 15 cm and diameter of 4 cm, with specific surface of 11.42 m2 m-3 of reactor. The bamboo remained immersed in effluent's fermentation for 470 days, occupying a volume of 1.061 m3 in the chamber. Before the reactor, it was installed a container to hold sand and clay contained in the effluent, which also works to equalize the flow. The daily flow rate was controlled by a water meter, which was disassembled, cleaned and checked daily.

In the Figure 1 it is shown the scheme of implementation of the anaerobic tubular flow pilot reactor with continuous horizontal gravity feeding.


The treatments were the hydraulic retention times (HRT) of 13.0; 11.5; 10.0 and 7.0 days. The inoculation was performed with 10 m3 of sludge from anaerobic pond from cassava starch industry the volumetric ratio of 10.0: 22.6: 1.0 m3 (sludge: water: effluent). The stabilization load was achieved by gradually daily increasing feeding until getting the first HRT of 13.0 days, when an equivalent of HRT was waited to exit from the effect of increased load. The increases in load were monitored through measurements of pH, volatile acidity ratio/total alkalinity (VA/TA) and flammability of biogas with blue flame. The pH values should be above 6.5, whereas the values of VA/TA ratio should be less than 0.5. The Table 1 details temporal managing of the experiment.

The samples were collected daily and analyzed for pH, chemical oxygen demand (COD), total volatile solids (VS), volatile acids (VA) and total alkalinity (TA), according to the methodology described in APHA (1998). Sixty percent of the total samples were composed, collected in the morning, afternoon and evening. The other samples, collected at the first treatments, were single samples. The number of samples used for obtaining the response variables was: 20 in HRT on the 13.0 days; 32 in the HRT on the 11.5 and 10.0 days, and 27 in the HRT on the 7.0 days, totaling 79 samples. The design was carried out to meet statistical need to have a value of observations, per treatment, close to 3 times the number of response variables.

The variables evaluated were temperature (T), organic load in terms of COD and VS, biogas production by consumed COD and VS and volumetric, pH and ratio VA/TA. The biogas production was corrected for STP (Standard Conditions of Temperature and Pressure) and totalized daily through a meter of LPG (Liquefied Petroleum Gas)/natural gas.

The data were submitted, with the program R 2.13.0 (R Development Core Team, 2011), to the multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA), evaluating the effects of treatments on response variables and the tests of comparing hypotheses of the mean vectors of response variables, taking into account the correlations. To identify the proper techniques of multivariate statistical inference, related to MANOVA and to the mean comparison tests, it was performed an analysis of the assumptions: multivariate normal distribution, identified by univariate and multivariate normality tests; homogeneity of the covariance matrix, identified by the M Box test and equality of variance and covariance matrix, identified by the Bartlett test. The desirability chart was obtained with the program STATSOFT (STATSOFT, INC 2006).

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

The Table 2 presents the results of descriptive statistics for the response variables.

The differences between treatments, identified in the statistical analysis, consider the influences of all variables. The highest coefficients of variation were observed in organic load variables COD and VS, biogas production by CODc, VSc and volumetric and ratio VA/TA. The behavior is due to the variation of concentration in organic load, in the effluent's flow generated in the cassava starch industry and in the biogas produced.

To evaluate the influence of treatments on response variables set, it was chosen the analysis of multivariate variance (MANOVA), because the linear correlations among the variables were no more than moderate, as can be seen in Table 3.

The Table 3 presents the positive moderate linear correlation between the independent variable HRT and the dependent variable reduction of organic load in COD, demonstrating that the reduction of the HRT reduced the efficiency of the anaerobic treatment (FENG et al., 2008). Two other moderate linear correlations, but negative, occurred with the volumetric biogas production and ratio VA/TA. The researches confirm that the reduction of HRT increases the volumetric production of biogas, fact explainable by the increasing of the microbial metabolism in face of increased substrate supply (KUCZMAN et al., 2011). The content of volatile acids in the pilot reactor was another variable that increased with HRT reduction, possibly due to the increased flow of effluent in the reactor, with reduction of methanogenic activity (WIJEKOON et al., 2011).

The variable internal temperature of the reactor showed a positive linear correlation with the production of biogas per volume of reactor, demonstrating that the specific biogas production per volume of reactor is proportional to the temperature (CHAE et al., 2008).

On the other hand, the reduction of COD showed a negative linear correlation with VA/TA ratio, associating the reduction of organic load in COD with the increasing of alkalinity in the reactor.

The volumetric production of biogas showed a weak positive linear correlation with the load. Therefore, to increase the biogas production per reactor volume it should be operated with higher loads (KUCZMAN et al., 2011).

Finally, the biogas production per consumed COD obtained positive linear correlation with the biogas production per VS consumed, confirming the similar nature of the variables.

The variables organic load and reduced organic load, for both COD as VS, had no significant linear correlation: thus, the percentages of reduction were maintained regardless of the intensity of the loads, demonstrating that the reactor had ability to stabilize higher loads.

The Table 4 presents the summary of the statistical univariate and multivariates.

Analyzing the assumptions associated with multivariate statistical model, which validate the use of MANOVA, as shown in Table 4, the only variable with univariate normality by the Shapiro-Wilk method, at 5% significance level, was the pH. In the analysis of multivariate normality, the p-value resulted in <0.01, showing that the set of response variables did not present multivariate normal distribution. The assumption of homogeneity of the covariance matrix, evaluated by the M Box test hypothesis, was rejected at 5% of significance. Despite of the assumptions associated with the model have not been attended the Pillai criterion, it was used because this procedure is robust enough to guarantee reliability in the multivariate method, considering the minimal sampling size used in the experiment (MUIRHEAD, 2005). The p-value, by Pillai test with a significance level of 1%, presented itself <0.01, showing that at least one treatment influenced the set of responses.

The test of equality of variance and covariance matrices was performed by the Bartlett Test at 1% significance, with p-value <0.01, concluding that the matrices of variance and covariance, comparing the treatments two by two, were not equal. As at least one of the treatments was statistically significant and the variance and covariance matrices were not equal, the Hotteling Test was applied, which compares the average vectors two by two, justified by the sample size that meets the minimum requirements (MUIRHEAD, 2005) for the accuracy of statistical inference. The comparison of average vectors, by Hotteling Test at 1% significance, resulted in a p-value <0.01, showing that the sets of response variables are, on the average, different between the treatments.

The Figure 3 presents the behavior of the average values of COD and affluent flow.


Despite of the increase of the flow during treatments to increase the organic load in the reactor, the COD concentration in the effluent fluctuated, with the HRT decrease of 7.0 days, showing the variability in the concentration of raw material in a pilot reactor.

The Figure 4 presents the evolution of the average values of organic load in COD and VS.


The organic load in COD presented itself always increased and the load in VS decreased between the HRT of 13.0 and 10.0 days, causing a slight increase in load between the beginning and the end of the experiment. The decrease of the COD and the increase of the HRT during the experiment were responsible for the slight increase of the organic load.

With the reduction of the HRT, it occurred an increase in the organic load with diminution of the reduction of the organic load, except for the HRT of 10.0 days. This exception is explained by the higher temperature with which the HRT of 10.0 days was operated, when the more intense activity of the reactor increased the organic load reduction. COD reductions occur with the increasing in the HRT, because the substrate has more time to degrade itself (FENG et al., 2008; KUCZMAN et al., 2013).

KUCZMAN et al. (2011) fed an horizontal tubular bench reactor with effluent of cassava starch, using an organic load of 2.68 g COD L-1d-1, TRH of 7 days and 33 ºC, and obtaining a COD reduction of 95%. In the present experiment, they were obtained COD removal efficiencies of 70% for the same HRT (7 days) and an average temperature of 23.6 C. The advantage achieved by the authors may be explained by the operating temperature, higher in 9.4 ºC, even without support mean. The average values of temperature and reduction of COD are shown in the Figure 6.


It is observed in the Figure 6 that, although the temperature, statistically different, varied from 21.5 to 23 ºC and the HRT from 13.0 to 11.5 days, there was a decrease in the COD reduction, contradicting the researchers Chae et al. (2008), who reporte that the microbial activity is proportional to temperature variation. The decrease in reduction of COD, even with the increase in temperature, may be justified because it is the beginning of the fermentation process, when the system has not had structured biomass. At HRT of 10.0 days, due to the average temperature of 27.7 º C, there was an accentuated increase in the COD reduction, close to 88%. At the HRT of 7.0 days, the reduction in temperature decreased the reduction of COD, as also observed by CHAE et al. (2008). The average temperature ranged from 21.5 to 27.7 ºC, which is below the optimal range for mesophilic digestion, from 35 to 37 ºC (BOUALLAGUI et al., 2004).

The Figures 7 and 8 present the profiles of the average biogas production at the treatments.



The biogas productions followed the variations of the internal temperature of the reactor, which often interferes with the performance of biological wastewater treatment and with the stability of the process. The temperature presented positive linear correlation with the production of biogas, as shown in the Table 2. The temperatures below 24 ºC, in HRT of 13.0; 11.5 and 7.0 days, are considered psichrophilics (<25ºC) (EL-MASHAD et al., 2004), the phase of lower microbial activity (DONOSO- BRAVO, 2011). The biodigester was operated for 111 days, of which 83 days (75%) had average temperatures between 21.2 and 23.5 ºC, which was prejudicial to biogas production (CHAE et al., 2008). The higher production of biogas in the reactor in 10.0 days HRT resulted from average temperature of 27.7 ºC. The biogas, analyzed in composite sample from the HRT of 7.0 days, resulted in 53.7% methane.

Anaerobic digestions that occur below 30 ºC change the microbial activity in 11% per ºC temperature. The research of KUCZMAN et al. (2011) in bench reactor, with the same effluent and without the support mean, obtained biogas production per CODc of 0.61 against 0.91Lg-1 of this study and volumetric biogas production of 0.63 against 0.37 LL-1 d-1, due to the operating temperature of the reactor, 33 ºC against 23.5 ºC in the same HRT at 7.0 days.

FEIDEN & CEREDA (2003) fed a pilot UASB reactor with effluent of cassava starch and obtained production of 3.975 L of biogas per liter of manipueira influent to the reactor, equivalent to the average of the present study.

In the Figure 9, it is observed that the HRT of 9.8 days is the treatment that combines both the higher reduction of COD with higher production of biogas by COD consumed. The smoothness of the curve defines a broad range of HRT, between 8.0 and 12.0 days, as the greatest performance in the variables reduction of COD and biogas production by COD consumed.


As for the physical durability against microbiological degradation of bamboo, it was found that, at the end of 470 days submerged inside manipueira in fermentation, the parts had no damages. The bamboo parts still remained submerged, after the data collection, for more 28 days. The Figure 10 presentess the visual characteristics of the bamboo parts taken from the reactor, at two different times.


Observing the Figure 10A, it is possible, after 60 days of inoculation, see the beginning of the biofilm formation, indicating that the first treatments hstill did not have it.

In the Figure 11 are described the average values of stability reactor indicators.


The optimal pH range, from 6.8 to 7.2 (WARD et al., 2008), was achieved in the HRT of 13.0, 11.5 and 7.0 days, whereas the VA/TA ratio, which recommended range, according to Sanchez et al. (2005) is 0.1 to 0.5, was observed in the HRT of13.0 and 10.0 days. The pH in the HRT of 10 days, showed up more than 7.2 and VA/TA ratio above 0.5 in the HRT of 11.5 and 7.0 days: even so the fermentation process was stable, observed by the maintenance of biogas production. In the HRT of 10.0 days, influenced by the temperature, the ratio value VA/TA decreased and the pH increased, improving the performance of the reactor. Several observations of VA =/TA ratio had values above 0.8, especially in smaller HTR, which could cause the collapse of the system, with the decrease in pH and inhibition of methanogenic phase. The reactor capacity in supporting values VA/TA above normal limits can be associated with the use of support mean, which provided higher amount of microorganisms.

CONCLUSIONS

Anaerobic treatment of manipueira in horizontal tubular pilot reactor showed COD removals between 67 and 88% and the best biogas production by CODc, VSc and volumetric occurred in HRT of 7.0; 10.0 and 13.0 days, respectively. The pH was maintained above 6.5 and high ratios VA/TA (0.82) did not result in instability, which may be due to the presence of the support mean. The HRT of 10.0 days, conducted under higher temperature (27.7 ºC), showed the best performance, with increased biogas production and bigger reduction of COD (87.7%). The treatments, evaluated jointly, showed themselves, with 1% of significance, statistically different.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

To the Post Graduation Program in Agricultural Engineering - PGEAGRI of Western Parana State University - UNIOESTE for the infrastructure support, and to CNPq for granting the funds.

REFERENCES

APHA - American Public Health Association. Standard methods for the examination of water and wastewater. 19th ed. Washington, 1998.

BOUALLAGUI, H.; HAOUARI, O.; TOUHAMI, Y.; BEN, C. R.; MAROUANI, L.; HAMDI, M., Effect of temperature on the performance of an anaerobic tubular reactor treating fruit and vegetable waste. Process Biochemistry, London, v. 39, p. 2143-2148, 2004.

CHAE, K. J.; JANG, A.; YIM, S. K.; KIM I. S. The effects of digestion temperature and temperature shock on the biogas yields from the mesophilic anaerobic digestion of swine manure. Bioresource Technology, Essex, v. 99, p. 1-6, 2008.

CHAVALPARIT, O.; ONGWANDEE, M. Clean technology for the tapioca starch industry in Thailand. Journal of Cleaner Production, Amsterdam, v.17, n.2, p.105-110, 2009.

DONOSO-BRAVO, A.; MAILLIER, J.; MARTIN, C.; RODRIGUEZ, J.; ACEVES-LARA, C. A.; WOUWER, A. V. Model selection, identification and validation in anaerobic digestion: A review. Water Research, New York, v. 45, n. 17, p.5347-5364, 2011.

EL-MASHAD, H. M.; ZEEMAN, G.; VAN LOON, W. K. P.; BOT, G. P.A.; LETTINGA, G. Effect of temperature and temperature fluctuation on thermophilic anaerobic digestion of cattle manure. Bioresource Technology, Essex, v. 95, p. 191–201, 2004.

FAO - Organização das Nações Unidas para Agricultura e Alimentação. Disponível em:<https://www.fao.org.br/>. Acesso em: 20 ago. 2011.

FEIDEN, A.; CEREDA, M. P. Potencial energético do biogás gerado no tratamento de águas residuárias de fecularias em sistema piloto de biodigestão anaeróbia com separação de fases. Energia na Agricultura, Botucatu, v. 18, n. 2, 2003.

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KUCZMAN, O.; TAVARES, M. H. F.; DAMASCENO, S. D.; TORRES, D. G. B.; FLECK, L. Influence of hydraulic retention time on the anaerobic treatment of cassava starch extraction effluent using a one-phase horizontal reactor. Journal of Food, Agriculture & Environment, v.11 n.1, p. 1118-1120, 2013.

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SÁNCHEZ, E.; BORJA, R.; TRAVIESO, L.; MARTÍN, A.; COLMENAREJO, M.F. Effect of organic loading rate on the stability, operational parameters and performance of a secondary up flow anaerobic sludge bed reactor treating piggery waste. Bioresource Technology, Essex v.96, n.3, p.335-344, 2005.

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WARD, A. J.; HOBBS, P.J.; HOLLIMAN, P. J.; JONES, D. L. Optimisation of the anaerobic digestion of agricultural resources. Bioresource Technology, Essex, v.99, n. 17, p.7928-7940, 2008.

WIJEKOON, K. C.; VISVANATHAN, C.; ABEYNAYAKA, A. Effect of organic loading rate on VFA production, organic matter removal and microbial activity of a two-stage thermophilic anaerobic membrane bioreactor. Bioresource Technology, Essex, v. 102, n. 9, p. 5353-5360, 2011.

Recebido pelo Conselho Editorial em: 31-10-2012

Aprovado pelo Conselho Editorial em: 30-6-2014

  • APHA - American Public Health Association. Standard methods for the examination of water and wastewater. 19th ed. Washington, 1998.
  • BOUALLAGUI, H.; HAOUARI, O.; TOUHAMI, Y.; BEN, C. R.; MAROUANI, L.; HAMDI, M., Effect of temperature on the performance of an anaerobic tubular reactor treating fruit and vegetable waste. Process Biochemistry, London, v. 39, p. 2143-2148, 2004.
  • CHAE, K. J.; JANG, A.; YIM, S. K.; KIM I. S. The effects of digestion temperature and temperature shock on the biogas yields from the mesophilic anaerobic digestion of swine manure. Bioresource Technology, Essex, v. 99, p. 1-6, 2008.
  • CHAVALPARIT, O.; ONGWANDEE, M. Clean technology for the tapioca starch industry in Thailand. Journal of Cleaner Production, Amsterdam, v.17, n.2, p.105-110, 2009.
  • DONOSO-BRAVO, A.; MAILLIER, J.; MARTIN, C.; RODRIGUEZ, J.; ACEVES-LARA, C. A.; WOUWER, A. V. Model selection, identification and validation in anaerobic digestion: A review. Water Research, New York, v. 45, n. 17, p.5347-5364, 2011.
  • EL-MASHAD, H. M.; ZEEMAN, G.; VAN LOON, W. K. P.; BOT, G. P.A.; LETTINGA, G. Effect of temperature and temperature fluctuation on thermophilic anaerobic digestion of cattle manure. Bioresource Technology, Essex, v. 95, p. 191201, 2004.
  • FAO - Organização das Nações Unidas para Agricultura e Alimentação. Disponível em:<https://www.fao.org.br/>. Acesso em: 20 ago. 2011.
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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    06 Feb 2015
  • Date of issue
    Dec 2014

History

  • Accepted
    30 June 2014
  • Received
    31 Oct 2012
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