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Industrial Process Description for the Recovery of Agricultural Water From Digestate
21
Citations
31
References
2020
Year
EngineeringMechanical DewateringAgricultural WasteAgricultural EconomicsAnaerobic DigestionWastewater TreatmentAgro-industrial WastewaterBiogasAgricultural Water ManagementWater TreatmentIndustrial Process DescriptionProduced WaterWater QualityHydrothermal CarbonizationResource RecoveryWaste ManagementWater TechnologyHydrothermal CarbonisationWater ResourcesEnvironmental EngineeringWater PurificationAgricultural Irrigation
Abstract Currently, the reclamation and reuse of water have not reached their full potential, although more energy is needed to obtain and transport freshwater and this solution has a more serious environmental impact. Agricultural irrigation is, by far, the largest application of reclaimed water worldwide, so the proposed concept may result in the production of water that can be used, among others, for crop irrigation. This paper describes a novel installation for the recovery of the agricultural water from the digestate, along with the results of initial experiments. Currently, water is wasted, due to evaporation, in anaerobic digestion plants, as the effluent from dewatering of the digestate is discharged into lagoons. Moreover, water that stays within the interstitial space of the digestate is lost in a similar fashion. With increasing scarcity of water in rural areas, such waste should not be neglected. The study indicates that hydrothermal carbonization (HTC) enhances mechanical dewatering of the agricultural digestate and approximately 900 L of water can be recovered from one ton. Dewatered hydrochars had a lower heating value of almost 10 MJ/kg, indicating the possibility of using it as a fuel for the process. The aim of this Design Innovation Paper is to outline the newly developed concept of an installation that could enable recovery of water from, so far, the neglected resource—i.e., digestate from anaerobic digestion plants.
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