Indian digester

The Indian-type digester (Fig. 1) basically is comprised of a cylindrical body, gasometer, feed pit and outlet pit (Florentino, 2003). The digester is made using burnt-clay bricks and cement. The cylindrical dome is made of metal sheets and moves up and down as it stores and releases the biogas. The digester is operated in continuing method and often vertically, almost cylindrical built. The putridity space filled the ground and it has a dividing wall. This dividing wall improves and holds back the fresh slime gush again through short way. The gas is gathered in floating gas lock. The steel gas lock is provided with stir elements. The periodic destruction of swimming layer is performed using the manual stirring of gas lock. The requested gas pressure arises from the heaviness of the swimming gas lock. The gas pressure can basically be changed in the practice by putting things on the gas lock.

This type is suitable for the homogeneous materials, as for the animals’ excrements that do not tend to build sinking layers. The green waste must be split. If it is mixed with huge allotments, then it will threat the digester with blockage. Generally, there are several designs of Indian digesters, thereof: floating gas holder type biogas plant (KVIC model), Deenbandhu model, and Pragati model. The KVIC model is composite unit of a masonry digester and a metallic dome, where the maintenance of constant pressure by upward and downward movement of the gas holder. The Deenbandhu model consists of segments of two spheres of different diameters joined at their base, where this model requires lower costs in comparison to KVIC model. The Pragati model is a combination of Deenbandhu and KVIC designs, where the lower part of the digester is semi spherical with conical bottom

image176