The effect of acidogenic and methanogenic conditions on the availability and stability of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus in a digestate

This study compared eleven organic substrates under acidogenic and methanogenic fermentation regarding their effects on digestate organic carbon, ammoniacal nitrogen, and inorganic phosphorus concentration. The result showed increases in phosphate concentration under acidogenic conditions and reduction in ammonium nitrogen after drying at 100 °C. The highest phosphate values of 3.2 ± 0.38 g/kg were achieved using whey permeate substrate while the effect of drying on ammonium nitrogen concentration was lowest for acidogenic bird seed fermentation with an ammonium loss of 59.7%. Both results were facilitated by high total volatile fatty acid concentration produced from available carbon-rich agricultural wastes which reached a maximum value of 5.71 ± 0.53 g/L, respectively. Increases in phosphate and ammonium nitrogen stability under acidogenic conditions was a consequence of lower pH, a condition synonymous with acidogenic only fermentation. The accumulated volatile fatty acid contributed to higher carbon to nitrogen ratio under acidogenic fermentation. Higher labile carbon to nitrogen ratio can trigger immobilization of ammonium nitrogen in the soil and this presents a case for subsequent experimentation into acidogenic digestate application in soil.Graphical abstract
Source: Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering - Category: Chemistry Source Type: research