Browse
Search
Agenda - 12-01-2008 - 3d
OrangeCountyNC
>
Board of County Commissioners
>
BOCC Agendas
>
2000's
>
2008
>
Agenda - 12-01-2008
>
Agenda - 12-01-2008 - 3d
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
4/23/2013 10:50:27 AM
Creation date
12/1/2008 4:37:46 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
BOCC
Date
12/1/2008
Meeting Type
Regular Meeting
Document Type
Agenda
Agenda Item
3d
Document Relationships
Minutes - 20081201
(Linked From)
Path:
\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\2000's\2008
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
64
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
1.3.3 Anaerobic Digestion <br />As applied to the processing of MSVV, anaerobic digestion is a wet treatment process <br />vvhena vvaotm is first pre-sorted and then fed into water tanks. Using agitators, <br />pumps, conveyors and other nnabsha|o handling equipment, MSVV is wetted and <br />dissolved. Metals, glass and other constituents of MSVV that have no affinity for <br />water are eventually discharged from the system into dedicated containers for <br />recycling, further processing or final disposal. The paper, garbage, soluble <br />components, etc., generate "black water" which has a relatively high organic <br />content. This stream is taken to a series of digesters where the time it sits in the <br />chamber, the residence time, will be sufficient to generate an off-gas. The process is <br />shown in the schematic in Figure B-13. <br />� <br />Figure B-13. P�cems�ow��r Anaerobic Digestion Systemm <br />This gas is hdl in methane and other organics and can be burned as a fuel for <br />heating or for electric power generation. The solid residual from the digestion <br />process is similar to compost and can be used as a soil amendment. The process <br />also separates out recyclable materials such as glass and rnata|a. There are many <br />such facilities processing sewage sludge, manure and other homogeneous wastes. <br />ArrovvBio of Haifa, Israel, is an example of a vendor that is offering to construct <br />anaerobic digestion facilities to process MSVV in the United States. They have <br />responded to procurements in Los Angeles and New York. They operate a 300 TPD <br />full-scale o4SVVdemonstration process line in Tel Aviv, illustrated in Figure B-14' 17 <br />The system operates without high temperatures or pressure. In theory, it is <br />en±nsrne|y simple, relying on non-specialized mechanical equipment (pumps, <br />screens, macerators, tanks, conveyors, etc.) for operation. Digestion occurs through <br />the presence of natural microorganisms in MSVV, so charging with specialty or unique <br />bacteria is not necessary. It has a high resistance to upsets because of the scale of <br />its operation, i.e., 300 tons ofMSVV entering the system per day, and any poisons <br />that might threaten the digestion process (as has been experienced with sewage <br />treatment plant digesters) are likely to be of such snna|| fraction that it will have no <br />significant effect on digester cultures. <br />The system is equipment and labor intensive. Although redundancy is normally built <br />into the system, with multiple process lines and duplication of critical pumps, <br />17 Source: ArrowBio, Haifa, Israel. <br />GB8/C08027-01 B-20 August 15,2OO8 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.