Assessing anaerobic co-digestion of faecal sludge with sugarcane press mud and water hyacinth for biogas and biofertilizer production
Abstract
In Uganda especially peri-urban areas, faecal sludge (FS) and agro-industry wastes are
abundant, and their poor management poses environmental and public health risks. In a bid to
find safe disposal and resource recovery, this study evaluated the potential of anaerobic co
digestion of FS with sugarcane press mud (SP) and water hyacinth (WH) for biogas
production. It is postulated that co-digestion with carbon rich substrates (water hyacinth and
press mud), could enhance digestibility, stabilisation of bio-solids and improve methane yield
higher than from faecal sludge alone. The experiment involved characterization of the of
feedstock and residual solids, determination of biogas yields, methane content, and eventual
pathogen reduction. Moisture content, pH, total solids, volatile solids, ash content, nitrogen,
phosphorus, potassium, carbon, sodium, calcium, total coliforms, Escherichiacoli (E. coli),
Salmonella, chemical oxygen demand, ammonium-nitrogen, lead and chromium were
measured. Five experimental setups were ran for 51 days and included; FS (100%), SP
(100%), WH (100%), FS+WH (1:1), and FS+SP (1:1) in 30L bio-digesters each with 20L of
feedstock and 5L of inoculum (activated faecal sludge), with 5L left for gas accumulation.
Biogas production was monitored using 20L gas collection bags, with cumulative and
specific yields calculated based on volatile solids (VS) added and methane content analyzed
using the Geotech BIOGAS 5000 gas monitor. By day 50, FS+SP had the highest cumulative
biogas volume of 256 L, an average specific biogas yield of 89.3 L/kg VS with methane
content of 64.7%. Following this, was SP that generated 218.7 L of biogas with an average
specific biogas of 47.9 L/kg VS, methane yield of 50.9-56.2% peaking at 56.2% methane
content by day 21. Water hyacinth alone produced 96.3 L of biogas, an average specific
biogas of 46.9 L/kg VS and methane content of 51.5%. A combination of FS+WH produced
178.8 L of biogas, yielding an average specific biogas of 80.3 L/kg VS, with methane content
beginning at 49.4% on day 7 and decreasing to 44.3% by day 49. Finally, FS alone had the
lowest yield, with 15.4 L of biogas and an average specific yield of 3.7 L/kg VS, peaking at
39.3% methane content by day 49. .Escherichia coli were completely removed in all setups.
Substrate SP had the highest nitrogen and calcium content among the substrates. Co-digested
substrates FS+SP and FS+WH demonstrated significant enhancement in nutrient
composition, with enhanced concentration of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, making
them suitable for agricultural applications. The assessment of digestate substrates for
fertilizer potential revealed a ranking from highest to lowest as follows: SP, FS+SP, FS+WH,
FS, and WH. While all substrates demonstrated potential as fertilizers due to their nutrient
content, they required further treatment to lower pathogen numbers, particularly total
coliforms, before safe application. The study concludes that co-digestion, enhances methane
production and nutrient recovery. Recommendations include use of continuous mixing,
explore other substrates, optimal substrate ratios, ammonia mitigation strategies, and field
trials for digestate utilization.