Digestate or slurry from biogas digester useful as organic plant fertilizer

From waste to useful effluent as organic plant fertilizer. I noticed my chilli plant starts flowering everytime I pour the effluent to the ground below it.

It is very obvious when effluent from biogas digester used onto chilli plant, its flowers bloom significantly thrn producing lot of chillies.






Need Biogas Now?



How to feed a biogas digester to produce biogas

 To feed a biogas system we need to know how much to put into it. Because the system is a biological one and operated by bunch of methane microbes, we need to know the background temperature where you placed the digester to determine the volume they can consume within a period of time. Too much feeding will cause sourness shows unability of the microbes to cope (overfeeding). Methane microbes activity will only work in optimum within a narrow pH window like 6-8. So the amount of feed is very critical to maintain the system in a balance easily control by looking at pH. I am very lucky able to find temperature data at my place. The average is like 26.8 celcius. So, according to David David William House 's graph (look below), the approximate HRT* is 45 days. So, it is safer for me to decide to choose 50 days HRT for my digester. To determine how much to feed daily is by calculating = digester volume (liter) / HRT (day) = 200 liter/50 days = 4 liter/day. Again, rule of thumb do not get solid food waste over 50% of daily feeding volume. In my case for 4 liter feeding, 2 kg of food waste is the maximum volume then mix with 2 liter of water to a total of 4 liter. If you do not have confident and do not want to get your system sour lets try less than 50% food waste of your daily feeding volume. Please try and error, experiment with your system and you will learn a lot finding the most optimum condition to run your system.


HRT - hydraulic retention time


HRT indicates the number of days required for a given amount of digestion to occur at a specified temperature. The general idea is that the colder things are, the longer things take. Of course, it could therefore also represent the size of the digester needed for a given amount of daily feedstock, since that daily amount will have to stay in the digester an approximate number of days, the digester will be correspondingly larger as the average temperature drops.


Source of graph - DIY Home Biogas Digester: How to make biogas at home manual by David William House is worth to try (diybiogasgenerator.blogspot.com)

Need Biogas Now?

How to operate a small scale biogas digester system

Biodigester operates like a stomach. Everything goes in will have to go out after fermentation. The amount that goes in is about the same with the one you draw out. It has to be systematic and consistent to ensure the digestion system works properly all the time. According to a simple formula I posted previously in this group, for this 160 liter digester, the size of feeding is about 160/50 or to make it simple 150/50 equals to 3 liter. So for 160 liter system, it is advisable to feed 3 liter at a time. To follow a rule of thumb or common practice in feeding you have to apply 1:1 ratio. Best is to mix 1.5 kg of organic waste to 1.5 liter of water or total up to 3 liter there you have 3 liter feed in 1:1 ratio. Next step is taking out 3 liter of existing slurry out as an excretion from the system and add 3 liter of liquid waste into the system as its fresh feed. To ease the process its best if you prepare a 3 liter bucket to be used for the purpose so that you wont just simply do things without knowing the exact volume and jeopardize the stabiliy and equilibrium of the process in years to come.


Design your own small scale biogas digester system at home



 

Large Scale Underground Biogas Digester System Lay out



 

DIY Biogas: Make and Use Your Own Renewable Natural Gas

Make your own homemade natural gas from food scraps, garden trimmings, and animal waste!
Understand how to craft a recipe to make your own renewable energy substitute for natural gas and propane.
DIY Biogas contains complete plans and parts lists with active links to build two different biogas generators that help you learn, understand, and grow your biogas operation. With this hands-on, minds-on guide, you’ll gain the knowledge and experience you need to convert waste into energy. Whether you’re looking for a unique science project or want to cook meals with your own backyard biogas, this book is the most practical place to start.
With fuel prices and scarcity on the rise, it’s time to re-learn how to meet our own energy needs. Start today and harvest your own local, renewable energy resource tomorrow!