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Journal ArticleDOI

Techniques for transformation of biogas to biomethane

TLDR
A number of techniques have been developed to remove H 2 S from biogas, such as pressure swing adsorption, membrane separation, physical or chemical CO 2 -absorption as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
Biogas from anaerobic digestion and landfills consists primarily of CH 4 and CO 2 . Trace components that are often present in biogas are water vapor, hydrogen sulfide, siloxanes, hydrocarbons, ammonia, oxygen, carbon monoxide and nitrogen. In order to transfer biogas into biomethane, two major steps are performed: (1) a cleaning process to remove the trace components and (2) an upgrading process to adjust the calorific value. Upgrading is generally performed in order to meet the standards for use as vehicle fuel or for injection in the natural gas grid. Different methods for biogas cleaning and upgrading are used. They differ in functioning, the necessary quality conditions of the incoming gas, the efficiency and their operational bottlenecks. Condensation methods (demisters, cyclone separators or moisture traps) and drying methods (adsorption or absorption) are used to remove water in combination with foam and dust. A number of techniques have been developed to remove H 2 S from biogas. Air dosing to the biogas and addition of iron chloride into the digester tank are two procedures that remove H 2 S during digestion. Techniques such as adsorption on iron oxide pellets and absorption in liquids remove H 2 S after digestion. Subsequently, trace components like siloxanes, hydrocarbons, ammonia, oxygen, carbon monoxide and nitrogen can require extra removal steps, if not sufficiently removed by other treatment steps. Finally, CH 4 must be separated from CO 2 using pressure swing adsorption, membrane separation, physical or chemical CO 2 -absorption.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Once-through CO2 absorption for simultaneous biogas upgrading and fertilizer production

TL;DR: In this paper, a new process is developed for biogas upgrading using the total ammonia nitrogen (TAN) in the slurry as a renewable absorbent, which can be transferred into free ammonia by adding NaOH to increase the solution pH.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of varying LED light sources and influent carbon/nitrogen ratios on treatment of synthetic sanitary sewage using Chlorella vulgaris

TL;DR: It is showed that red light is the optimum light wavelength for growing microalgae Chlorella vulgaris inMicroalgae biological wastewater treatment systems, given a harvest time of 144 h, and nutrient removal efficiency was significantly affected by light wavelength, light intensity, and the interaction of these two factors.
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Tree-Based Automated Machine Learning to Predict Biogas Production for Anaerobic Co-digestion of Organic Waste

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors used 8 years of data collected from an industrial-scale anaerobic co-digestion (AcoD) operation at a municipal wastewater treatment plant in Oakland, California, combined with a powerful automated ML method, Tree-based Pipeline Optimization Tool, to develop an improved understanding of how different waste inputs and operating conditions impact biogas yield.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review on the purification and use of biogas in compression ignition engines

TL;DR: A detailed review of recent research pertaining to biogas purification techniques and operation of CI engines with Biogas in dual fuel and homogeneous Charged Compression Ignition (HCCI) modes is presented in this paper.
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Techno-economic analysis of a power to biogas system operated based on fluctuating electricity price

TL;DR: In this paper, a feasibility analysis of a novel operating principle based on fluctuating electricity prices for an existing biogas plant was presented, which showed that up to 40% of the electricity fed into the system can be stored as biomethane, and the system energy flow is most sensitive to the electrolyzer efficiency.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Energy use of biogas hampered by the presence of siloxanes.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed the fundamentals of siloxanes and the current problems of the associated fouling and summarized the useable methods for siloxane abatement from biogas and made some recommendations towards preventive actions.
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Removal of siloxanes in biogases.

TL;DR: In contrast to biogas drying by refrigeration, which had a poor effect on siloxane content, the installation of meadow ore adsorption beds resulted in a significantsiloxane reduction of 31-75%, depending on the site studied.
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Novel fixed-site–carrier polyvinylamine membrane for carbon dioxide capture

TL;DR: In this paper, fixed-site-carrier membranes were prepared for the facilitated transport of CO2 by casting polyvinylamine (PVAm) on various supports, such as poly(ether sulfone) (PES), polyacrylonitrile (PAN), cellulose acetate (CA), and polysulfone (PSO).
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Chemical absorption of H2S for biogas purification

TL;DR: In this paper, an experimental study of purification of a biogas by removal of its hydrogen sulphide (H2S) content was carried out by means of chemical absorption in an iron-chelated solution catalyzed by Fe/EDTA, which converted H2S into elemental sulphur (S).
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemo-autotrophic biogas purification for methane enrichment: mechanism and kinetics

TL;DR: This gas stream treatment process improves the quality and caloric value of the biogas and increases the methane content through the use of a chemo-autotrophic methanogen, uncoupled methanogenesis techniques and hollow fiber membranes.
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