Biogas potential from cow manure

Cow manure is an excellent substrate for biogas production in anaerobic digesters though the gas yield from a single substrate is not high. However, mixing cow manure with other kind of waste materials in co-digestion can optimize the production of biogas. In this thesis work the biogas potential fr...

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Autor principal: Yohaness, Meaza Tadesse
Formato: Second cycle, A2E
Lenguaje:Inglés
Inglés
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1151/
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author Yohaness, Meaza Tadesse
author_browse Yohaness, Meaza Tadesse
author_facet Yohaness, Meaza Tadesse
author_sort Yohaness, Meaza Tadesse
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Cow manure is an excellent substrate for biogas production in anaerobic digesters though the gas yield from a single substrate is not high. However, mixing cow manure with other kind of waste materials in co-digestion can optimize the production of biogas. In this thesis work the biogas potential from cow manure as a single substrate was investigated. The questions to be resolved were if 1) the biogas potential wasaffected by the feeding strategy of the cows and 2) there is correlation between manure methane potential and enteric methane emission from the same feed. Six fistulated Swedish red breed dairy cows were offered three different types of feed mixtures A(high starch and low fibre), B (medium starch and fibre), and C (low starch and high fibre) during three experimental periods (1, 2, and 3). The complete diet was composed of forage and concentrate. The forage was high quality grass silage, and the concentrate consisted of barley, oat, peas, and rapeseed cake. Each cow received only one type of feed mixture during each experiment period. During the last 5 sampling days of each experiment period, the cows manure was collected and frozen at -20 °C. A batch type reactor was then operated at 37 °C to investigate the methane potential of the manures. The result showed that enteric methane emission of the cows was weakly positively correlated with methane potential of their manure (R=0.2). A better fit was found between starch content in the cow diet and methane potential of the manure though it was not significant alone (P=0.19). The result of the present work was against the hypothesis "less enteric methane of the cow will give high gas potential of the manure."
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spelling RepoSLU11512012-04-20T14:12:39Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1151/ Biogas potential from cow manure Yohaness, Meaza Tadesse Energy resources management Cow manure is an excellent substrate for biogas production in anaerobic digesters though the gas yield from a single substrate is not high. However, mixing cow manure with other kind of waste materials in co-digestion can optimize the production of biogas. In this thesis work the biogas potential from cow manure as a single substrate was investigated. The questions to be resolved were if 1) the biogas potential wasaffected by the feeding strategy of the cows and 2) there is correlation between manure methane potential and enteric methane emission from the same feed. Six fistulated Swedish red breed dairy cows were offered three different types of feed mixtures A(high starch and low fibre), B (medium starch and fibre), and C (low starch and high fibre) during three experimental periods (1, 2, and 3). The complete diet was composed of forage and concentrate. The forage was high quality grass silage, and the concentrate consisted of barley, oat, peas, and rapeseed cake. Each cow received only one type of feed mixture during each experiment period. During the last 5 sampling days of each experiment period, the cows manure was collected and frozen at -20 °C. A batch type reactor was then operated at 37 °C to investigate the methane potential of the manures. The result showed that enteric methane emission of the cows was weakly positively correlated with methane potential of their manure (R=0.2). A better fit was found between starch content in the cow diet and methane potential of the manure though it was not significant alone (P=0.19). The result of the present work was against the hypothesis "less enteric methane of the cow will give high gas potential of the manure." 2010-05-06 Second cycle, A2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1151/1/Yohaness_mt_100506.pdf Yohaness, Meaza Tadesse, 2010. Biogas potential from cow manure : influence of diet. Second cycle, A2E. Uppsala: (NL, NJ) > Dept. of Microbiology <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/4024.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-8-496 eng
spellingShingle Energy resources management
Yohaness, Meaza Tadesse
Biogas potential from cow manure
title Biogas potential from cow manure
title_full Biogas potential from cow manure
title_fullStr Biogas potential from cow manure
title_full_unstemmed Biogas potential from cow manure
title_short Biogas potential from cow manure
title_sort biogas potential from cow manure
topic Energy resources management
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1151/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1151/