Water Environment Federation (WEF) Discussion Forums
Home      Members   Calendar   Who's On
Welcome Guest ( Login | Register )
      

Home » WEF Discussion Forums » Industrial Wastes Treatment » Biodiesel wastewater

15 posts, Page 2 of 2. ««12

Biodiesel wastewaterExpand / Collapse
Author
Message
Posted 7/30/2007 4:26:48 PM
Supreme Being

Supreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme Being

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: 6/6/2008 4:03:33 PM
Posts: 101, Visits: 532
I am impressed by the breadth and depth of collective knowledge attracted to this forum.

I do not know the process used to produce the biodiesel here (although it is a university project, so I'm sure with some digging I could probably source it.)  The operators have been calling the bio-diesel by-product "glycerol".

Our WWTP is located in a university town (30% of our winter population is made up of students).  When the university goes on vacation, (i.e. spring break) the operators drip feed the glycerol into the plant to keep the food:microorganism ratio up.  So when the students return (30% increase in loading over a 48 hour period) the microbes are up to the task.  It's possible that feeding this "junk food" to the plant over a long period of time could contribute to increased nocardia and all it's inherent foaming problems.  But in the short term, the microbes seem to enjoy junk food.

I look forward to learning more on the treatment of this waste.  I have deep reservations whether the continued production of smog and subsequent load on our food resources is going to be a good thing for our environment as a whole.  But that's another thread.

G

Post #6119
Posted 11/26/2007 9:28:46 AM
Forum Newbie

Forum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum Newbie

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: 11/26/2007 9:19:36 AM
Posts: 3, Visits: 5
We have a paper on treating biodiesel wastewater, please visit http://proceedings.itb.ac.id/indeks.php?li=article_detail_id&id=242    although it is written in Bahasa Indonesia. You may guess the wastewater  characteristics from the Tabel 1. BOD = 65 689 ppm with COD = 152 079 ppm and high TDS = 24 454 mg/L.

Regards,

Tjandra Setiadi, Ph.D (Mr.)

Tjandra Setiadi, Ph.D.
Department of Chemical Engineering, ITB
Bandung, Indonesia

Post #7558
Posted 2/3/2008 10:57:22 AM
Forum Newbie

Forum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum Newbie

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: 2/3/2008 10:56:42 AM
Posts: 1, Visits: 1
Hi

I would be happy to have more details about it,

Idan

Post #8241
Posted 2/21/2008 11:30:52 AM
Forum Newbie

Forum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum NewbieForum Newbie

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: 6/4/2008 11:08:17 AM
Posts: 3, Visits: 8
I am looking for technologies and users of equipment to concentrate fats, oils and grease from restaraunts to be used as a feed stock for anaerobic digestion.  Is this something that may be applicable.

Ken Fonda, PE
Brown and Caldwell
858-571-6749 direct line
858-514-8833 fax
858-349-6106 cell
Post #8458
Posted 3/20/2008 5:24:47 PM
Supreme Being

Supreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme Being

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: 5/17/2008 12:28:05 PM
Posts: 247, Visits: 3,171
I, also, am very interested in anaerobic digestion processes applied to bio-diesel residuals. More specifically, the glycerol bearing water phase.

People seem to think that a use will be found for this by product. My own view is: it's a low value material that's going to be even lower in value once the bio-diesel train starts really rolling; an inevitable consequence of skyrocketing oil prices.

My notion is that the best thing to do with it is to use it on site as a feedstock for bio-gas generation. There are problems with this. Glycerol seems to work well as a supplement to traditional bio-gas feedstocks, like manure, but there's limits to how much can be used. Too much appears to suppress methane production.

http://www.dedalusenviro.com

 

Post #8703
« Prev Topic | Next Topic »

15 posts, Page 2 of 2. ««12

Reading This TopicExpand / Collapse
Active Users: 1 (1 guest, 0 members, 0 anonymous members)
No members currently viewing this topic.

PermissionsExpand / Collapse

All times are GMT -5:00, Time now is 7:09am

Powered By InstantForum.NET v4.0.0 © 2008
Execution: 0.125. 10 queries. Compression Enabled.