Abstract Experiments have been performed to ascertain the feasibility of anaerobic digestion for the treatment of an alcoholic waste (i.e. fusel oil), consisting of approx. 50% methanol and 50% higher alcohols. Batch experiments as well as continuous experiments have been conducted. The continuous experiments have been carried out using the “Upflow Anaerobic Sludge Blanket” (UASB-) process. As inoculum a sugar beet waste grown and highly settleable and active anaerobic sludge (SBA-sludge) has been used. The SBA-sludge was shown to be superior to digested sewage sludge as seed material for an anaerobic treatment process, because—although it in fact is adapted to the fermentation of volatile fatty acids (VFA)—it does not have any significant difficulty with respect to the methanogenesis of the alcohols present in the fusel oil waste. The breakdown of higher alcohols starts immediately and that of methanol within a few days, depending on the initial load applied. In the UASB-experiments sludge loads up to 0.6 kg COD·kg VSS −1 ·day −1 could already be well accommodated within 1 week, so that within this period a space load could be handled as high as 20 kg COD·m −3 ·day −1 , simply by supplying the reactor with approx. 30 kg SBA-VSS·m −3 averaged over the total reactor volume. Contrary to recent findings of Smith & Mah ( Appl. envir. Microbial. 36 , 870–879, 1978), which were obtained with a pure culture of Methanosarcina barkeri , the sludge is capable of fermenting VFA and methanol rapidly and simultaneously, provided the conditions for VFA and methanol fermentation are favourable. However, as in previous experiments with aqueous solutions of methanol (Lettinga et al., Water Res. 13 , 725–737, 1979), we observed that the digestion process can easily become upset, especially with respect to the degradation of VFA. Once again indications have been obtained that one or more trace elements are of eminent importance with respect to the stability of the process. At present the operation of a stable anaerobic treatment process for methanolic wastes cannot be guaranteed.
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