Output details
15 - General Engineering
University of South Wales
Integration of biohydrogen, biomethane and bioelectrochemical systems
The paper presents the improved energy conversion of the biomass feedstock by the integration of anaerobic bioprocesses. The paper, first presented as an invited plenary paper at the World Renewable Energy Conference 2010, established and justified the serial integration of BioCH4 and BioH2 with BES, to improve energy recovery and meet discharge limits. Subsequent research has investigated the effect of industrial waste streams, including investigations on food processing wastewaters (2 Sisters Food Ltd). The work was funded by RCUK SUPERGEN Biological Fuel Cell and SUPERGEN UK Sustainable Hydrogen Energy Consortium, and by the HEFCW funded Low Carbon Research Institute.