1977
DOI: 10.1002/bit.260190607
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Methane fermentation of brewery by‐products

Abstract: SummaryA laboratory-scale research program was undertaken to investigate the kinetics of the mesophilic (37°C) anaerobic digestion of brewery industry by-product. The purpose waa to develop data for the design and operation of full-scale units which could be used to generate methane fuel gas from these materials. This is important because the brewery industry has been susceptible to shortages of natural gas in recent years. The minimum SRT is 2.3 days, although for design purposes as much as ten days is recomm… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…This behavior of the kinetic constant raises doubts on the ability of this model to shed light on the actual phenomenon limiting the anaerobic digestion process. In fact, this model, which proved to apply very well to sugar digestion in a biofilm reactor 24 and to brewery by-products, 25 should show values of k 1 not depending on COD o .…”
Section: First Order Modelmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…This behavior of the kinetic constant raises doubts on the ability of this model to shed light on the actual phenomenon limiting the anaerobic digestion process. In fact, this model, which proved to apply very well to sugar digestion in a biofilm reactor 24 and to brewery by-products, 25 should show values of k 1 not depending on COD o .…”
Section: First Order Modelmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Ethanol's significance as fuel has dramatically increased in the last decade [1] due to characteristics that render it more effective than gasoline in optimized engines [2], with the additional advantage of contributing less to the green house effect than the conventional fuel. Ethanol, among other effective fuels, could be produced from hexoses and pentoses through microbial fermentation [3-8]. Importantly, plant biomass, which constitutes one of the main renewable energy sources on earth, could provide a significant and inexpensive source of the hexose and pentose mixture, if appropriately and effectively depolymerized [2,9-11],.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notwithstanding the satisfactory values of r 2 , the decrease of k 1 with increasing starting COD raises doubts on the ability of this model, which proved to apply very well to a biofilm reactor [30] and brewery by-products [31], to shed light on the actual phenomenon limiting the anaerobic digestion of this material. 2.…”
Section: First Order Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%