The flow pattern effects of hydrodynamic cavitation on waste activated sludge digestibility

Abdelrahman, Amr Mustafa and Tebyani, Seyedreza and Rokhsar Talabazar, Farzad and Tabar, Saba Aghdam and Berenji, Nastaran Rahimzadeh and Sheibaniaghdam, Araz and Koyuncu, Ismail and Koşar, Ali and Guven, Huseyin and Ersahin, Mustafa Evren and Ghorbani, Morteza and Ozgun, Hale (2024) The flow pattern effects of hydrodynamic cavitation on waste activated sludge digestibility. Chemosphere, 357 . ISSN 0045-6535 (Print) 1879-1298 (Online)

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Abstract

The disintegration of raw sludge is of importance for enhancing biogas production and facilitates the degradation of substrates for microorganisms so that the efficiency of digestion can be increased. In this study, the effect of hydrodynamic cavitation (HC) as a pretreatment approach for waste activated sludge (WAS) was investigated at two upstream pressures (0.83 and 1.72 MPa) by using a milli-scale apparatus which makes sludge pass through an orifice with a restriction at the cross section of the flow. The HC probe made of polyether ether ketone (PEEK) material was tested using potassium iodide solution and it was made sure that cavitation occurred at the selected pressures. The analysis on chemical effects of HC bubbles collapse suggested that not only cavitation occurred at low upstream pressure, i.e., 0.83 MPa, but it also had high intensity at this pressure. The pretreatment results of HC implementation on WAS were also in agreement with the chemical characterization of HC collapse. Release of soluble organics and ammonium was observed in the treated samples, which proved the efficiency of the HC pretreatment. The methane production was improved during the digestion of the treated samples compared to the control one. The digestion of treated WAS sample at lower upstream pressure (0.83 MPa) resulted in higher methane production (128.4 mL CH4/g VS) compared to the treated sample at higher upstream pressure (119.1 mL CH4/g VS) and control sample (98.3 mL CH4/g VS). Thus, these results showed that the HC pretreatment for WAS led to a significant increase in methane production (up to 30.6%), which reveals the potential of HC in full-scale applications.
Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Biomethane potential; Energy balance; Flow pattern; Hydrodynamic cavitation; Waste activated sludge
Divisions: Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences
Sabancı University Nanotechnology Research and Application Center
Depositing User: Ali Koşar
Date Deposited: 10 Jun 2024 14:38
Last Modified: 10 Jun 2024 14:38
URI: https://research.sabanciuniv.edu/id/eprint/49347

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