Methane-rich biogas production from waste-activated sludge with the addition of ferric chloride under a thermophilic anaerobic digestion system†
Abstract
Thermophilic anaerobic digestion for methane production could realize simultaneously both energy recovery from waste-activated sludge and pollution control; however, low methane production and an imbalance between the hydrolysis and methanogenesis processes are often encountered. Three ferric salts, Fe(NO3)3, Fe2(SO4)3 and FeCl3, were introduced to test the potential effects on sludge anaerobic digestion performance under a thermophilic system. Enhanced methane production was achieved using FeCl3 as the additive: this had a cumulative methane production of 117.44 mL CH4 per g of volatile solid (VS), an increase of 98.9% over that in the control experiment (59.05 mL CH4 per g VS). Both Fe(NO3)3 and Fe2(SO4)3 caused some negative effects, meaning that the type of anion should also be considered. The introduction of FeCl3 created a favorable environment resembling positive precipitation and biocatalysis. The succession of microbial communities before and after the introduction of ferric salts was investigated and compared through pyrosequencing analysis, and in particular the dominance of Methanosarcina increased from 1.3% to 63.2% in effective reads with the addition of FeCl3.