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Feasibility of composting combinations of sewage sludge, olive mill waste and winery waste in a rotary drum reactor.
Waste Manag. 2010 Oct; 30(10):1948-56.WM

Abstract

Representative samples of the following biowastes typically generated in Castilla La Mancha (Spain) were composted using a pilot-scale closed rotary drum composting reactor provided with adequate control systems: waste from the olive oil industry (olive mill waste; OMW), winery-distillery waste containing basically grape stalk and exhausted grape marc (WDW), and domestic sewage sludge. Composting these biowastes was only successful when using a bulking agent or if sufficient porosity was supported. OMW waste composting was not possible, probably because of its negligible porosity, which likely caused anaerobic conditions. WDW was successfully composted using a mixture of solid wastes generated from the same winery. SS was also successfully composted, although its higher heavy metal content was a limitation. Co-composting was an adequate strategy because the improved mixture characteristics helped to maintain optimal operating conditions. By co-composting, the duration of the thermophilic period increased, the final maturity level improved and OMW was successfully composted. Using the proposed reactor, composting could be accelerated compared to classical outdoor techniques, enabling easy control of the process. Moisture could be easily controlled by wet air feeding and leachate recirculation. Inline outlet gas analysis helped to control aerobic conditions without excessive aeration. The temperature reached high values in a few days, and sufficient thermal requirements for pathogen removal were met. The correct combination of biowastes along with appropriate reactor design would allow composting as a management option for such abundant biowastes in this part of Spain.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Institute for Chemical and Environmental Technology (ITQUIMA), Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Castilla-La Mancha, 13071, Ciudad Real, Spain.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Evaluation Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

20435457

Citation

Fernández, Francisco J., et al. "Feasibility of Composting Combinations of Sewage Sludge, Olive Mill Waste and Winery Waste in a Rotary Drum Reactor." Waste Management (New York, N.Y.), vol. 30, no. 10, 2010, pp. 1948-56.
Fernández FJ, Sánchez-Arias V, Rodríguez L, et al. Feasibility of composting combinations of sewage sludge, olive mill waste and winery waste in a rotary drum reactor. Waste Manag. 2010;30(10):1948-56.
Fernández, F. J., Sánchez-Arias, V., Rodríguez, L., & Villaseñor, J. (2010). Feasibility of composting combinations of sewage sludge, olive mill waste and winery waste in a rotary drum reactor. Waste Management (New York, N.Y.), 30(10), 1948-56. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wasman.2010.04.007
Fernández FJ, et al. Feasibility of Composting Combinations of Sewage Sludge, Olive Mill Waste and Winery Waste in a Rotary Drum Reactor. Waste Manag. 2010;30(10):1948-56. PubMed PMID: 20435457.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Feasibility of composting combinations of sewage sludge, olive mill waste and winery waste in a rotary drum reactor. AU - Fernández,Francisco J, AU - Sánchez-Arias,Virginia, AU - Rodríguez,Lourdes, AU - Villaseñor,José, PY - 2009/07/02/received PY - 2010/02/25/revised PY - 2010/04/07/accepted PY - 2010/5/4/entrez PY - 2010/5/4/pubmed PY - 2011/1/19/medline SP - 1948 EP - 56 JF - Waste management (New York, N.Y.) JO - Waste Manag VL - 30 IS - 10 N2 - Representative samples of the following biowastes typically generated in Castilla La Mancha (Spain) were composted using a pilot-scale closed rotary drum composting reactor provided with adequate control systems: waste from the olive oil industry (olive mill waste; OMW), winery-distillery waste containing basically grape stalk and exhausted grape marc (WDW), and domestic sewage sludge. Composting these biowastes was only successful when using a bulking agent or if sufficient porosity was supported. OMW waste composting was not possible, probably because of its negligible porosity, which likely caused anaerobic conditions. WDW was successfully composted using a mixture of solid wastes generated from the same winery. SS was also successfully composted, although its higher heavy metal content was a limitation. Co-composting was an adequate strategy because the improved mixture characteristics helped to maintain optimal operating conditions. By co-composting, the duration of the thermophilic period increased, the final maturity level improved and OMW was successfully composted. Using the proposed reactor, composting could be accelerated compared to classical outdoor techniques, enabling easy control of the process. Moisture could be easily controlled by wet air feeding and leachate recirculation. Inline outlet gas analysis helped to control aerobic conditions without excessive aeration. The temperature reached high values in a few days, and sufficient thermal requirements for pathogen removal were met. The correct combination of biowastes along with appropriate reactor design would allow composting as a management option for such abundant biowastes in this part of Spain. SN - 1879-2456 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/20435457/Feasibility_of_composting_combinations_of_sewage_sludge_olive_mill_waste_and_winery_waste_in_a_rotary_drum_reactor_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0956-053X(10)00216-3 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -