March-April 2009

Sludge Is Power

Utilizing microturbines to produce heat and energy from wastewater treatment plant sludge

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By Diane McDilda

2 Comments


When evaluating the efficiency of the microturbine, the plant reported that it had an electrical efficiency of 27%, and a combined heat and power efficiency of 80%. The plant also uses two internal combustion engines and boilers that can run on digester gas or natural gas. During the warmer summer months, the needed heat for the digester is provided solely by the digester gas. But during the winter months, natural gas can be brought in if needed. Influent to the plant comes from combined sewers, cold runoff combines with residential wastewater. The influent temperature is a far cry from the 98˚F the digester needs.

Sailing’s Not Always Smooth
Even with the successes plants have had using microturbines, implementing CHP at wastewater treatment plants isn’t always easy. Scott and Broihahn understand the frustrations some operators have experienced.

“With the early microturbine installations, there were a lot of failures,” says Broihahn. “The process of cleaning the gas was not sufficient because of gas conditioning problems. Or sometimes it was just the microturbines. Now there are over 4,000 microturbines installed. The early generation had bugs, but the fourth generation is technically improved.”

“The turbine products and the air systems are much better,” adds Scott.

The Sheboygan plant experienced some problems, but Doerr is an advocate of the microturbine systems. “Three of the turbines have had continual problems, but the rest have been OK,” he says. “Some of the units are early-made models; they have different types of engines.” He believes it is the older engines that are having the problems.

One lesson learned at the facility included how the location of the equipment could be affected by ammonia gas. A chiller unit is used to cool the gas and remove the moisture. “It was in a balcony-type location,” says Doerr. “The vapors have ammonia that ate away at the tubing, and we had to replace the chiller system.”

Even at the Columbia plant, the microturbines weren’t without complications. After coming online in April 2003, they were shut down in August of the same year and didn’t come back online until October 2004. Problems stemmed from moisture in the gas. The majority of problems experienced at the plant centered on gas conditioning, with siloxane deposits and moisture leading to higher-than-expected fuel preparation and maintenance costs.

Because of plant renovations, the microturbines have been taken out of service at the Columbia plant. Odt believes overall the microturbines ran well enough and, if they don’t come into play in the plant upgrades, will likely be used at one of the city’s smaller plants.

Looking Ahead
As the country looks to become more energy efficient, more utilities want to provide their own electricity and are considering various options.

With 40% of the plant’s operating costs going to power, energy savings is a big driver for Doerr. “My goal is, by the time I retire in eight years, to be able to produce all of our energy onsite,” he says.

To accomplish this, Doerr has two other green energy projects underway. Solar panels are planned for the 200,000–square foot roof surfaces at the plant and a hydropower project on the shore of Lake Michigan.

“It’s estimated that we could produce 2.1 MW of solar power on the flat roofs,” he continues. “The sewers are over 100 years old, and when it rains there is a lot of leakage. The flows can go up from 11 mgd [million gallons per day], to as high as 64 mgd. With all the pumps running, the demand is 1.1 megawatts.”

Doerr acknowledges that it wouldn’t be likely that the 2.1 MW produced by solar power could be used at the same time demand is highest, because of weather conditions. The benefit would come because power added to the grid when the sun is shining could be bought back at a lower rate when it’s raining. The solar project is planned for 2012 and 2013.

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He also visited Germany in search of hydroturbine options and found energy being garnered from elevations as low as 25 feet. Doerr is planning to utilize the elevation difference between the plant and Lake Michigan. “We’re 50 feet above the lake,” he says. “It could provide 10% of our electrical energy. There is money in the budget, and we plan to install it in 2010.”

With the microturbines in place and solar and hydropower planned, it’s likely Doerr will meet his onsite energy goal.  

Author's Bio: Diane McDilda is an environmental writer and author living in Gainesville, FL.

What Do You Think?

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Michael Sevener

April 30, 2009 2:18 PM PT

Good article. Let's take it to the next logical step: how much energy can we extract from our fecal matter? China is often cited as an example of a highly decentralized system of anaerobic digestors used for generating cooking gas at an individual household level. We should also realize that these millions of digestors are also fed with agricultural livestock manure. I suspect that if we look at the typical 200 to 250 g human deposition we will find it does not contain enough energy to pump it and the gallons of water used to flush it to the wastewater treatment plant. Hence the paradigm shift advocated by Daigger and others.

meholmes

April 20th, 2009 12:28 PM PT

Can this sludge technology be used to reduce septic waste and to produce energy on a small 20-lot subdivision?

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