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Review

A Review of Sludge-to-Energy Recovery Methods

1
New Materials Institute, The University of Nottingham, Ningbo 315100, China
2
Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, The University of Nottingham, Ningbo 315100, China
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Energies 2019, 12(1), 60; https://doi.org/10.3390/en12010060
Submission received: 17 November 2018 / Revised: 17 December 2018 / Accepted: 18 December 2018 / Published: 25 December 2018

Abstract

:
The increasing volume of sewage sludge from wastewater treatment facilities is becoming a prominent concern globally. The disposal of this sludge is particularly challenging and poses severe environmental hazards due to the high content of organic, toxic and heavy metal pollutants among its constituents. This study presents a simple review of four sewage to energy recovery routes (anaerobic digestion, combustion, pyrolysis and gasification) with emphasis on recent developments in research, as well as benefits and limitations of the technology for ensuring cost and environmentally viable sewage to energy pathway. This study focusses on the review of various commercially viable sludge conversion processes and technologies used for energy recovery from sewage sludge. This was done via in-depth process descriptions gathered from literatures and simplified schematic depiction of such energy recovery processes when utilised for sludge. Specifically, the impact of fuel properties and its effect on the recovery process were discussed to indicate the current challenges and recent scientific research undertaken to resolve these challenges and improve the operational, environmental and cost competitiveness of these technologies.

1. Introduction

The rapidly increasing population and urbanization growth has resulted in higher demands on finite resources such as land space, water, food and energy. It has also intensified environmental challenges, which include pollution and waste management issues. These issues are quite detrimental to the global goal of sustainable development and hence, have ignited global interest in sustainable strategies for energy utilization, production and waste management. A direct and an easily overlooked consequence of the increasing waste globally is the escalating volume of urban wastewater, especially sewage sludge. Sewage sludge can be described as any solid, semi-solid or liquid waste generated from a wastewater treatment facility. This wastewater can be sourced from municipal, commercial or industrial processes. The physical properties (low ratio of solid to liquid matter) of sewage requires thickening and mechanical dewatering to facilitate transportation and logistics during the treatment processes. These processes help increase the solid particles concentration in sludge to ~10–25 wt% from the original predominantly liquid (<3 wt% solid) state [1,2,3,4]. In water treatment facilities, the preliminary treatment of the raw sewage is done such as initial straining of received sludge for removal of large particles such as sand, grit and stone. This is followed by the settling of the sewage in sedimentation tanks using gravitational force which enables the formation and removal of slurry sludge at the bottom of such tanks [2,5]. This marks the point of primary sludge generation. The solid phase in sludge is made up of an in-homogenous mix of proteins, carbohydrates, oils, inorganic matters and micro-organisms. This mixture of organic, inorganic and living organisms results in an unstable, volatile and putrid matter with toxic elements [3]. Consequent treatments after this are mostly biological (composting or digestion), physical (e.g., pressure, heat, vibration, microwaves) or chemical (oxidations, alkalinity adjustments) methods aimed at stabilising the organic matter (destruction of pathogens, odour elimination and reduction of volatile contents) contained in the primary sludge in order to improve the quality of effluent, maximize nutrient recovery and/or for safer disposal. The product of this stabilisation process could be referred to as secondary sludge if it undergoes further biological processes [2,6,7,8]. Anaerobic digestion is an example of such stabilisation technique whose secondary sludge can be used as fertilizer and incorporated with energy recovery capabilities by harnessing the produced biogas from the digester [9]. With the exception of initial pre-treatments such as drying, the utilisation of thermal treatment methods for stabilisation normally results in the production of char and/or ash as the output residues, rather than sludge. Unfortunately, the variety of sewage types, their origins and the production/treatment process leads to variations in the properties of the sludge. Also, the additional resource, energy and cost implication incurred from the treatment and appropriate disposal of this waste has led to an increase in sea dumping, particularly in developing continents like Africa and Asia [2,10]. For example, approximately 85% of sludge produced in China is currently improperly dumped into water bodies [2]. Alternative disposal methods used in developed countries that have imposed legal implications for improper dumping include landfilling, composting, incineration and land reclamation applications.
Recently, the annual sewage sludge production has been estimated at 10 million tons (dry matter), 20 million tons and 49 trillion litres in Europe, China and the United States, respectively, and further increases have been projected with economic and population growth [1,2]. Such a predicted increase in sludge production, environmental cost of improper disposal, shortage of landfills, stricter environmental regulations and renewed interest in the circular economy is an indication of the need for improving the current sewage sludge disposal practices worldwide. Apart from the ecological degradation caused by improper disposal of sludge, the disposal techniques like landfills, composting or storage are fast becoming unsustainable from an environmental perspective due to the shortage of land for landfill sites and rising environmental and health concerns with regards to the suitability of sludge constituents (pathogens, heavy metals and organic pollutants) in agricultural applications [7,11,12,13,14]. Still, the most predominant usage of recovered sludge is for agricultural use such as fertilizer. However, due to the increasingly restrictive environmental standards because of its high organic, phosphate and heavy metals contents, the requirements for biological routes such as anaerobic digestions, as well as thermal reactors such as incinerators for treatment, stabilisation and processing of sludge in any resource or energy recovery applications has increased [1]. Sustainability measures have increased focus on the recovery and reuse of sludge after treatment to reduce landfill requirements, environmental footprint and with lesser impact on the land, groundwater and food supply. All of which necessitates further development of sewage sludge management dynamics [3]. Such processing is aimed at the recovery and usage of sludge derived products such as raw rare metals, phosphorus, ash, chemicals and organic fuels. All of these requirements require better policies and enforcements and improved technologies for the processing, treatment, recovery and final disposal in the sludge utilisation chain. In the meantime, well-established processes remain quite limited in their capacities and capabilities to appropriately and economically meet all legal and environmental safety standards. This creates an engineering and design challenge associated with sewage sludge recycling technologies with focus on energy recovery from such wastes.
Owing to its volatile organic contents, which ranges from 21–48%, the energy content of dried sewage sludge reported in past literature varies between 11.10–22.10 MJ/Kg which indicates comparable and/or higher calorific values in comparison to lignite and various biomass samples [2,15]. This heating value is one of the core determinants of the suitability of sludge as a solid fuel, as well as the need to effectively eliminate the high organic matter from sludge before disposal. Consequently, energy recovery from sludge is regarded as the most attractive methods for utilising the increasing quantity of sludge for eliminating volatile organic matter and reducing waste volume with possibility of recovering nutrients and/or metals. Most of these energy recovery technologies are not new as they have been developed commercially for other fuel types, however differences in the physical and chemical properties of sludge presents unique technical challenges which influences the energy recovery process and reactions. This is particularly relevant to thermochemical processes used for solid fuels such as coal and biomass with lower moisture, nitrogen and heavy metal content. For successful deployment of sludge to energy recovery platform worldwide, these factors must be considered carefully with sustainable and practical solutions to prominent challenges. This reinforces the need for further research into the viability and effectiveness of such conversion technologies to ensure commercialisation potential. While anaerobic digester and incinerator are traditionally adopted technologies for this waste, recent development have instigated new treatment methods and thermochemical technologies for improving energy efficiency with various optimistic commentaries on the commercial readiness of these technologies. Especially with growing interest in waste to energy technologies, the fondness for this concept might be adequate bias on the practicality and sustainability of such systems. Currently, only a handful of papers have reviewed energy recovery as a sludge treatment method with none evaluating current gaps in practices and its implication for sustainability [1,2,16].
This review work examines the fundamentals of various commercially viable energy recovery technologies that can be utilised sewage sludge. The detailed assessment of the impact of sludge properties, technological challenges and recent research directions to improve the energy recovery routes for the extracting high-value products (heat, power and synthesis gas) was discussed and summarised. This would also include an in-depth discussion on the properties of using sludge as feedstock individually or co-utilised with other solid fuels and the importance of pre-processing such as drying on the thermochemical processing yield. Finally, this paper deliberates on the briefly on the readiness of these energy recovery methods from a social, technological, environmental and economic perspective to gauge its commercial deplorability worldwide as sludge processing is a global concern. Furthermore, scientific literatures published in the last 10–15 years were reviewed and tabulated to highlight research themes been done for overcoming these challenges and increasing energy recovery. The references cited in this review paper are globally sourced and provide scientific and technological insights useful in obtaining an effective, economically viable and environmentally safe energy recovery technique for sewage sludge processing. Anaerobic digestion, combustion, pyrolysis and gasification are the only technologies analysed in this work. In addition, the identification of influencing factors and some barriers to the sustainable development of these technologies for sludge-to-energy was highlighted with focus on treatment technologies, energy and resource recovery. This review is aimed at encouraging further research work that would aid in scaling up and improving these technologies for ensuring affordability, acceptability and environmental sustainability.

2. Sludge-to-Energy Recovery Methods

The importance of energy recovery in contemporary waste management practices remains assured due to its impact on global waste minimization, resource optimization and alternative energy generation. The focus energy conversion technologies have been highlighted in Figure 1, which shows the conversion pathways of sludge to syngas, liquid fuel, chemicals, heat and/or electricity.
Anaerobic digestion is a biological conversion method which is widely used due to its low cost and ability to utilize organic waste with high moisture content without reducing the high calorific value of the produced biogas (combination of methane and carbon dioxide). The biogas obtained from the digester can be cleaned and further upgraded to produce bio-methane which can be a direct substitute for natural gas or the biogas can be converted to heat and electricity via cogeneration using thermal reactors. Biochemical processes traditionally occur in an inert environment at mesophilic temperatures for sludge stabilization with process residues used for agricultural purposes [2,17]. However, the reaction time is long with duration ranging from 7 days to 5 weeks and the conversion efficiency of organic matter is low with 40–70% of organic constituents unconverted after reaction completion. This results in digested sludge with poor biodegradability and high organic content diverted for agricultural applications which is inappropriate.
On the other hand, thermochemical conversion routes such as combustion, pyrolysis and gasification are characterised by shorter reaction times which range from seconds to min. Unfortunately, these processes require sludge with lower moisture content and drying of sludge requires enormous energy inputs. The rapid and controlled decomposition of ≥80% of the organic matter in inert, partially oxidizing or oxidizing atmospheres is one of the main benefits of these thermal processes in comparison the anaerobic digestion [17]. Although, the cost of thermal technologies are still significantly higher, as mentioned previously, incineration is another prominent process currently in use for sewage sludge management but the traditional practice was not intended for energy recovery but for waste volume reduction and harmful elements destruction [18,19]. The incorporation of heat recovery converts a traditional incinerator into a typical combustion system which harnesses heat from the flue gas derived after the complete oxidation of organic matter at high temperatures (800–1150 °C). The heat extracted is used for heating fluid (typically water) which can be used directly by heating or for generating electricity via a steam turbine. In contrast to combustion, pyrolysis takes place in completely inert atmosphere (devoid of oxygen) at moderate to high temperature (300–900 °C) to produce pyrolytic oil, biochar and non-condensable gases (CO, H2, CO2, CH4 and light hydrocarbons) [7,19]. The operating temperature, heating rate and residence time greatly impacts the product distribution and energy content of pyrolytic products. Bio-oil can be upgraded and used as liquid fuel or reformed to synthesis gas (CO and H2) for chemical production, while the biochar, non-condensable gases and bio-oil can also be used solid, gaseous and liquid fuels for electricity and heat generation via combustion. Alternatively, biochar can be used in adsorption or catalyst applications. Lastly, gasification involves the thermochemical conversion of organic compounds via partial oxidation (oxidiser lower than stoichiometric requirements) at high temperatures (650–1000 °C) for maximising gaseous products (CO, H2, CO2 and light hydrocarbons), particularly synthesis gas (CO and H2) [2,20]. The energy content of the product gas varies from 4–28 MJ/Nm depending on the gasifying agent and temperature. The derived gas can be routed to variety of end usages such as direct combustion for heat and electricity generation using a combined cycle gas turbine or further upgrading of synthesis gas into liquid fuels or chemicals via gas to liquid processes such as Fischer–Tropsch synthesis.
As these processes would be discussed in more details in later sections, the dependence of the energy recovery efficiency on the sludge properties requires a brief discussion. As described by past studies on sludge [2,15,21,22], sludge is primarily made up of: (i) water content, which is as high as 98% in the liquid phase and removed primarily by mechanical dewatering to obtain up to 25 wt% solid matter in sticky phase sludge. Further removal can be done via thermal drying to obtain <10 wt% moisture content in dried granular sludge (ii) non-toxic organic compounds which account for up to 48% of the dry solid and are derived mostly from plant sources (characterised by high volatile matter content). These compounds account for ~60% of the energy content in the raw wastewater with a heating value of 11.10–22.10 MJ/Kg, (iii) biological pollutants such as micro-organisms and pathogens, (iv) non-toxic inorganic compounds, e.g., aluminium-, silicon-, iron- and calcium-containing compounds, (v) toxic inorganic compounds such as zinc, nickel, mercury, chromium and, arsenic, mainly from industrial waste and corroded sewers. These compounds have higher concentrations in sludge compared to other solid fuels, (vi) toxic organic pollutants like dioxins and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and (vii) phosphorus and nitrogen containing compound sourced from peptides, proteins, sugars and fatty acids. All these constituents change physically and chemically with each energy recovery method. Changes include reduction in organic content, fluctuations in pollutants stability and toxicity, release of volatiles from solid fuels, densification of sludge and transformation of sludge into mainly inorganic compounds. Such changes must be appropriately monitored during all reaction stages.
Although, out of scope for this work, bioelectrochemical systems which converts organic matter into hydrogen/ methane/valuable chemical products(e.g., acetate, alcohols and fatty acids) by using microbial electrolysis cells and/or electricity using microbial fuel cell via electrochemical reduction are examples of high potential and promising sludge-to-energy technologies [20,23]. These system present a recent concept in energy recovery which may not require the use of expensive catalysts or rare metals. Concept of microbial electro-synthesis is still very novel and already has high prospect in various applications due to alternative materials for electrodes, separators, and catalyst, as well as unique system designs. With various technical challenges such as low power density, low conversion and yield rates and low catalytic capability which affects successful up-scaling, this system is currently considered to be expensive and in infancy development phase. Thorough review of such concepts has been done by others [20,23]. Nonetheless, research in this field is increasing exponentially and the future prospect of these biotechnologies remain optimistic, particularly with the development of cheap bio-cathodes and the elimination of external electricity requirements for driving the process. Another innovative concept is the integrated bio-refinery approach which involves the extraction of value added products and nutrients from sludge with emphasis on amino acids, proteins, bio-pesticides, fatty acids, phosphorus, bio-flocculants, enzymes, bio-plastics and bio-fuels [24,25,26,27]. Even though this concept is in its early stages, it is aimed at producing high value chemicals, liquid transportation fuels—bio-diesel and bioethanol—synthesis gas, heat and electricity. Hence, it has the potential for optimal extraction and utilisation of resources from waste streams. It is mostly integrated with anaerobic digestion, biological processes and thermal processes for production of bio-products, bio-chemicals and bio-fuels. However, this is currently a research field which requires further optimization in terms of operation parameters, cost and the quality of the extracted products. The biorefinery concept has recently been critically reviewed by Raheem et al. [16] and others [24,28]. Scalability, supply chain feasibility are the major hindrances to its development. Nonetheless, as this review work is focused on commercially deployable technologies that could help tackle sludge by transforming it into energy, bioelectrochemical systems and biorefineries are not further evaluated in this work.

2.1. Pre-Processing of Sludge

The constituents of sludge are made of blends of organic matters such as carbohydrates, proteins, fats and oils, a range of microorganisms (both living and dead), and inorganic elements which are characterized by high energy content. Nevertheless, the properties of sewage sludge are highly variable and dependent on its origin, wastewater treatment system, environmental requirements, seasonal variations and production processes such that simple processing such as drying can easily improve its organic contents and calorific value significantly. This makes the variability in sludge’s chemical composition more extreme in comparison with traditional biomass and coal samples. In addition to this, sludge has been detected to compose of high water content, toxic inorganics such as silver, cadmium, zinc, cobalt, chromium, copper, nickel, lead, mercury, and arsenic, organic pollutants and pathogens and microbiological pollutants [4,5,6]. These heavy metals are mostly pollutants from physiochemical and biological processes such as industrial waste, corrosion in pipelines, food, medicine, textile materials and cosmetics.
The proximate analyses of sludge is such that the volatile matter of biomass is higher while coal has lower volatile content in comparison to sludge. Also, the fixed carbon of coal and biomass is higher than that of sludge as established by past works [2,6]. Nonetheless, the ash content (mostly aluminium, calcium, iron, magnesium, sodium, phosphorus, silicon and titanium) of sludge is higher than that of biomass and coal due to its high inorganic content [7]. Similarly, the ultimate analyses of sludge reveal higher nitrogen (from protein and peptides), higher hydrogen and comparable carbon contents to lignite and biomass. The sulphur and oxygen content remain higher than biomass but comparable to that of lignite. Wet sludge has approximately 98 wt% moisture content and after mechanical dewatering processes, free water and some of the interstitial water can be removed, leaving about 73–84% of the water content. Irrespective of this dewatering process, the remnant moisture (mostly vicinal water) might require the application of thermal energy for rapid drying. The use of heat can reduce the moisture to very small content ~5.6% which is mostly chemically bonded water from inorganics such as calcium or aluminium hydroxides [7,8].
As mentioned previously, the high moisture content in wastewater would require removal through various dewatering processes. The most widely adopted method for obtaining primary sludge involves the coagulation, flocculation and sedimentation process such that coagulants are used to neutralize the charges of dispersed solid particles in wastewater and ease the formation of microflocs which are submicroscopic suspended particles made of dust, organic matter, earth particles, etc., stuck together after collision when coagulant is mixed with wastewater [2,9]. After coagulation, flocculation involves a slow mixing stage (with or without coagulants aids) intended to maximise collision contact and bind various microflocs to increase the size and become visible macroflocs of greater size and strength. Afterwards, sedimentation is used to remove the suspended particles from the water by the use of settling basins and mechanical systems for continuous removal of solids. As these flocs are heavier than water, sedimentation allows the falling down of suspended macroflocs against a barrier using centrifugal forces, electromagnetism and gravitational forces. This stage is the primary sludge formation point which still has about 70–75% moisture content. After this, other sludge dewatering and drying technologies such as belt presses, centrifuges, direct dryers and/or indirect dryers vacuum filters are used for the removal of the bulk of fluids contained in the primary sludge. Most drying techniques involve the use of thermal energy which can be naturally sourced using solar energy or the use of conventional energy intensive dryers (convection, conduction and hybrid dryers). The use of multiple low temperature heat sources via condensing heat exchangers for staged heating was also investigated for maximising thermal energy usage and improving the efficiency of the energy recovery process [29]. Most natural methods would utilise aeration techniques which would still require some form of energy consumption as well as more time for the completion of drying. The drying of fuels for vaporising their moisture content before further thermal processing has been well established for biomass and low rank coals such that the thermal process is designed to use up waste heat energy from the fuel thermal processing for the initial drying of the fuels. However, the drying process involves additional energy and operating costs [9,10]. The importance of drying for energy recovery from sludge is for the physical transformation of the waste material from wet matter into granular feedstock that can be easily handled and further use in most thermal processes.

2.2. Anaerobic Digestion

Anaerobic digestion is a biological process that occurs in an inert environment for the conversion of organic compounds into biogas by the use of microorganisms. The use of naturally occurring bacteria for biodegradation involves a series of biochemical stages including hydrolysis, acidogenesis (fermentation), acetogenesis and methanogenesis.
These metabolic stages are used for mass and volume reduction of the sludge while the organic contents are converted to biogas by the pathogens. The hydrolysis stage involves the conversion of the non-toxic organics into simple sugars, fatty acid and amino acids. Afterward, the acidogenesis and acetogenesis stage aids the fermentation of the hydrolysis products into acetate, carbon dioxide and hydrogen gas which are further converted to methane through methanogenesis [11]. Hence, each stage affects the performance of the digester, as depicted in Figure 2. This technique is adopted globally as the technologically matured and cost effective process used for stabilizing sludge before final disposal and the simplified schematic is represented in Figure 3. The dewatered sludge can be used directly in this energy recovery method and fed into the digester, but as mentioned previously, the high organic content of the digestate (digested sludge) has increased focus on the utilisation of pre-/inter- and/or post-treatment methods for maximising energy recovery and aiding the conversion of volatile organic solid in the digester. The digester is simply an air-tight tank where micro-organisms are aided by physical, biological or chemical catalysts (heat, enzymes and/or solvents) for the decomposition of organic matter. The effluent gas is biogas which is made up of 60–70% methane, 30–40% carbon dioxide and trace elements of other gases (H2S) with total calorific value of up to 28.03–38.92 MJ/Nm3 [2,20,30]. The biogas with its high methane content can be recovered for heat and electricity production using boilers, turbines and generators or alternatively upgraded for use as bio-methane. Studies by Aryal and Kvist [30], revealed the potential of upgrading biogas to 97.55% methane by the use of water scrubbers. This increases the calorific value of the biogas from 28.03 to 51.31 MJ/Nm3. Simultaneously, the remnant after this digestion process has high nutritional contents (phosphorus, potassium and nitrogen) which can be used as compost and/or fertilizers for agricultural and soil reclamation purposes if it conforms with environmental standards. In practice, a unit can consist of multiple digesters forming multi-stage systems to enhance gas recovery with various treatment methods used at each stage.
The potential of using this waste derived energy in the wastewater treatment plan has the potential of offsetting about 50% of the operational energy used in such facilities [10,12]. Alternatively, the energy can be used at other sources or sold to the grid. The utilization of this biogas contributes to the reduction of greenhouse gases emissions which occurred previously from the flaring or non-utilisation of the derived biogas as traditionally adapted. Nonetheless, this method of processing has a huge limitation with the long reaction time required and the need for suitable reaction conditions for the microorganism development which makes its cost effectiveness and profitability limited to large treatment plants.
The enhancement of the biogas yield and quality (methane to CO2 fraction), reduction of reaction time and implementation of better control strategies are the main factors being investigated for improving process efficiency and maximising energy recovered. Still, temperature remains one of the most decisive considerations that influence the quality and quantity of the biogas and its reaction time (digestion rate). Presently, digestion reactions occur within 12–60 °C depending on the reactor environment–landfill, sediments or anaerobic digesters [13]. The methane yield obtained from sludge varies between 80–377 mL CH4/g volatile solid depending on the feedstock, the number of digestion days, the process temperature and the pre-treatment methods used [14,17,31]. The use of chemical, mechanical and thermal pre-treatments methods to enhance the anaerobic conversion and improve anaerobic digestion of sludge has been widely adopted. Chemical pre-treatments mainly involve the use of strong reagents such as acid and alkali and oxidants for adjusting the pH of the sludge such that the yield of biogas is maximised by increasing the soluble organic fraction. Mechanical pre-treatments involve the use of mechanical vibration such as ultra-sonication for the disruption of the organic solid in the sewage sludge. Physiochemical pre-treatment such as microwave radiation quickens biological, chemical and physical processes due to heat and extensive collisions from the vibration of molecules and ion movement. Thermal hydrolysis involves the use of heat and/or pressure treatment for improving sludge digestibility and is currently commercially available. Devlin et al. [32] conducted a study on acid pre-treatments using various HCl dosage to vary the pH of various types of sludge from 6 to 1 which led to a reduction of approximately 8 digestion days and an increase in methane yield in comparison to untreated sludge. Similarly, the use of alkali pre-treatment by [19,32] revealed that increasing pH up to 10–12 using KOH and NaOH can increase the soluble organic fragments by 21.4–93% and 54–88% increase in methane generated. The use of ozone has also been adopted to enhance digestion rate and methane generation increased considerably by >100%. Recently, the use of mechanical pre- and inter-stage treatment via sonication using batch reactors at 100–400 W for 5–60 min has been demonstrated with improvements in organic compounds solubility, up to 77% increase in biogas and 42–95% increase in methane yield [33,34,35]. Similarly, the use of microwave irradiation of 800–1250 W at 2.45 GHz for 1–6min as pre-treatment increases the biodegradability of sludge by 47–50%, soluble organic fractions by >117% and biogas yield by 20–207%. Thermal pre-treatments of 60–180 °C led to reduction in sludge retention time from 28 days to 12–14 days and 6.3–16.5% increase in biogas produced while thermal hydrolysis at a temperature of 130–170 °C and a pressure of 3.4–7.9 bar reduces the volatile content of the digested sludge by 12.6–62% and increases biogas yield by 29–59%. Valo et al. [19] compared the effectiveness of chemical and thermo-chemical pre-treatment for the same sludge using KOH for increasing alkalinity and thermal treatment at 30–170 °C for 30–60 min. They discovered an increase in soluble organic content with increase in pH and temperature with 83% soluble organic fraction and 36% increase in organic fraction conversion at 170 °C with a pH of 12. Similar use of thermo-chemical post-treatment using HCl at 25–180 °C resulted in almost threefold increase in solubility of organic contents, 6.7–26% increase in soluble volatile solid conversion and methane production increased by almost 21%. The comparison of the effectiveness of anaerobic digestion with thermo-chemical pre-treatments with inter-stage treatment was done by Nielsen et al [18] using thermal treatments of 80–170 °C and KOH. The thermal pre-treatments at 80 °C increased volatile solid by 2–27% after each treatment stage and 44–57% increase at 170 °C and 68–74% increase when thermo-chemical pre-treatment of KOH at 170 °C is utilised. Their observations confirmed the effectiveness of inter-stage treatments in comparison to pre-treatments with increase in methane productions as high as 45% for thermal inter-stage treatment and 28% for thermo-chemical inter-treatment in comparison to 2–20% increase in methane for conventional pre-treatments [18]. Interestingly, the results from these studies reveals the effect of different pre-treatment methods on different sludge types and operating parameters utilized as indicated in Table 1. While some studies have contrasting views on the improvement in the solubility of the organic contents and revealed negligible change in methane yield even with increase in biogas produced, most studies show promising improvements as extensively reviewed by [36]. The use of these pre-treatments and/or inter-stage treatment of the sludge has seen considerable interest in recent years and various commercial applications due to the increase in efficiency of the biogas production, its effectiveness in promoting organic matter decomposition, and reducing organic contents of digestate.
However, these improvements come at additional energy, chemical reagents and operational costs as listed out in the advantages and disadvantages given in Table 2. Although increase in methane yield is prominent with most of these pre-treatment methods, high energy requirements remains a major hindrance for thermal, microwave and mechanical treatments with high capital cost as an additional disadvantage for thermal and microwave technologies. The benefits of simplicity and low technology cost can be found in mechanical and chemical pre-treatments, however the potential for toxicity and high cost of chemicals remains a challenge for chemical pre-treatments. Other pre-treatment methods are biological techniques such as microbial electrolysis cell and enzymatic hydrolysis are still undergoing lab-scale experiments.
The combination of different energy technologies such as anaerobic digestion followed with pyrolysis has been presented by Cao and Pawlowski [46] for maximisation of energy efficiency in comparison to the use of the technologies independently. The use of anaerobic digestion is particularly attractive as it fulfils most of the requirements in European Waste reuse and recovery hierarchy and its use in combination with food waste has been proposed by Morales-Polo et al. [47] due to the added benefit of nutrient enrichment, increase in alkalinity, reduced ammonia and enhanced stability of the process. Furthermore, ~20–40% increase in production of bio-methane was obtained from the co-digesting of mixed sludge and organic food waste by boosting the decomposition of acetate during methanogenesis [48]. Similar observations were reported by Guimarães et al. [49] where increase in volatile solid reduction, methane production was observed on co-digestion of sludge and food waste. However, such mix of waste feedstocks would also impose higher need for process control. In depth evaluation on anaerobic digestion has been done by Meegoda et al [21] and the cost of pre-treatment versus the modest increase in biogas requires crucial justification ensure cost effectiveness.
In summary, even with the systematic comparison of various pre-treatments routes on anaerobic digestion, the technology with all its benefits still remains hindered with high cost and low conversion efficiency. These limitations are depicted in Figure 4. As technological feasibility is dependent on sludge degradation and methane conversion efficiency, most of these researches fail to consider the energy, life cycle, environmental and economic costs of these pre-treatment methods which must be taken into account for a sustainable process. Apart from the optimization of process parameter for improving biodegradability of digestate, critical life cycle assessment is required for these treatment strategies for determining practicality. This is because the additional cost, energy and/or chemical inputs required by these pre-treatment techniques to maximize biogas yield may not necessarily be energy, environment or cost efficient and its impacts must be analysed before such can be implemented in practice.

2.3. Combustion

The combustion of all solid fuels is similar to that of sewage sludge. It involves the high temperature oxidation of fuels to obtain heat, carbon dioxide, water vapour and other trace gases. However, the use of combustion technology for waste materials such as sludge can be used for primarily generating heat (conventional combustion) or for reducing the volume of the waste materials (incineration). The conventional use of the heat generated from combustion technology is for heating or electric power generation via heat engines whereas incineration systems may or may not utilise the heat generated from combustion as their main purpose is for burning off harmful elements from waste before final disposal or re-use of residual ash in the construction industry. This is because incineration has been observed to reduce up to 90% of the sludge volume while terminating pathogens [50]. This use of incinerators is famous for clinical and municipal solid wastes and it has gained more attention recently due to the need of reducing the use of cultivable land for waste disposal [2]. The principle of solid fuel combustion involves drying, pyrolysis, volatiles combustion, char combustion, ash melting and agglomeration. These stages occur sequentially or simultaneously depending on the configuration, reactor conditions and fuel properties. For instance, some sludge and biomass could start pyrolysis at low temperature (~150 °C) typical for the fuel drying [51,52]. The release and burning of volatiles from this stage generates heat, CO, H2O, CO2, NOx and SOx which further interacts with the solid char particles in the fuel and increase surface temperatures. This mostly occurs earlier than the oxidising agent of the reactor reaches the required temperature or diffuses sufficiently to initiate char oxidation. This process is common during combustion of wet sludge, particularly waste of bulky particle sizes and is referred to as auto-gasification due to the high steam generated during the burning [53]. The representative chemical reactions are detailed in Equations (1)–(10) below.
Pyrolysis (inert atmosphere—N2; 350–700 °C):
C n H m O p CO 2 + H 2 O + CH 4 + CO + H 2 + ( C 2 C 5 )
Partial oxidation (oxygen lean atmosphere):
C + O 2 CO 2
C + 1 2 O 2 CO
H 2 + 1 2 O 2 H 2 O
Gasification (oxygen lean atmosphere—CO2, H2O; 800–1100 °C; 1–33 bar):
C + H 2 O CO + H 2
C + 2 H 2 O CO 2 + 2 H 2
C + CO 2 2 CO
Methanation (further reaction):
CO + 3 H 2 CH 4 + H 2 O
C + H 2 O 1 2 CH 4 + 1 2 CO 2
Combustion (oxygen rich environment—air or O2):
CH 4 + 2 O 2 2 H 2 O + CO 2
The volatiles combustion dominates the heat production from sludge combustion as the char contribution is relatively negligible. The increase of the surface temperature of the fuel from volatile combustion leads to the melting of some ash matter which may results in ash melts covering the particle surface at temperatures ≥900 °C. The char combustion proceeds with increasing temperature and increases the proportion of gaseous compounds till burn out which occurs quickly (equivalent or lower time span as the devolatilization stage) due to the low fixed carbon content of sludge [54,55]. This has also been attributed to the high char reactivity induced by the inorganic constituents char. Finally, the agglomeration of the ash particles is facilitated by the heat from char combustion and after the maximum surface temperature is reached; cooling begins gradually which indicates combustion completion [56]. This suggests that the burning off of all the organics and the melting and agglomeration of ash is required for the decrease in sludge volume during incineration while the drying, devolatilization and burning of volatiles is more crucial for the conventional combustion system for heat generation [16]. This indicates the considerations required for combustion and incineration efficiency. Such systems need to be equipped with flue gas cleaning facilities to minimise emissions, fly ash or hazardous gas emissions.
Unlike the anaerobic digestion where the dewatered sludge can be used directly, combustion requires further drying of the dewatered sludge to reduce the moisture content to <50 wt% before being fed into the reactor as seen in Figure 5.
The energy requirements of this drying process is quite endothermic. The drying requirements and acceptable moisture content is dependent on the furnace type as this would greatly influence the efficiency of the reactor. This is particularly important because of the heat loss from evaporation of sludge’s moisture content. In addition, high moisture is one of the precursors of incomplete combustion. The furnace operates at temperatures >850 °C for the complete oxidation of sludge which is done individually or blended with other solid fuels (coal or biomass) [57,58]. This process would require excess air for completion while auxiliary fuels and catalysts might be needed for initiation and maintaining reaction stability for operational efficiency. Ash and Flue gas are the main output from this reactor. The flue gas is made up primarily of oxides of carbon, nitrogen, sulphur and particulate matter which acts as the thermal store that allows heat transfer from itself to feed water. This aids in heat generation for direct use (industrial or residential heating) or electricity generation via steam turbines and generators. After the heat recovery process, the flue gas has to undergo treatment for eliminating pollutants before releasing exhaust gases (mostly CO2 and water vapour) into the atmosphere. The ash generated from this process can be either disposed of at the landfill or reused in agricultural or construction applications. However, this is primarily dependent on its chemical contents, particularly, the heavy metal contents of the ash.
Various combustion reactors are used such as multiple hearth, rotary kiln, and cyclone and fluidised bed furnace which have different fuel feeding mode, operating mode, advantages and disadvantages. However, fluidised bed furnace is quite popular for wet (35–59% moisture) and dried sludge due to its simplicity, inexpensive cost, uniform heating, low pollutants in flue gas (≤50% CO and NOx pollution, ≤40% CO2), lower residence time and high combustion efficiency [59,60,61]. Such technologies are also known for reducing cost associated with supplementary fuel such that about 0.2–1 million dollars savings has been realised annually from operational plants [16]. Recent studies are mainly focussed on three fields: (i) improving combustion reactivity and completion by optimising reaction parameters, utilising catalysts and co-blending with other fuels such as coal, oil shale and biomass [57,58,62,63,64,65,66,67]; (ii) utilisation of ash and fly ash generated from the process as fertilizer or cement [68,69,70]; and (iii) pollutants and toxic emission reduction for reducing CO, NOx, SOx and PAH emissions while preventing heavy metal emissions [58,61,70]. Recent works on sewage sludge combustions have been summarised in Table 3. The blending of sludge with other solid fuels has been observed to increase the reactivity and reduce reaction time of the fuel blends during combustion due to the high volatility of sludge [63,64,65,66,67]. Co-blending with sludge increased the mechanical properties of the ash which supports utilisation in construction industries as cement [70]. In addition to this, the use of catalysts such as CeO2 and Fe2O3 was studied by Wang et al. [65] which revealed further enhancement in the ignition and combustion properties of the blends. The main challenge with combustion of sewage sludge is mostly the high moisture and ash content which influences the thermal characteristics of the fuel and the design requirements of the combustor. High moisture content is not only deterrent for increasing the bulk density of the fuel, lowering the energy content and causing incomplete oxidation, it also requires additional time, oxidants and energy for drying the sludge and has potential for forming erosive sulphuric compounds [71]. Additionally, sludge with >80% moisture content requires auxiliary fuels for sustaining the reaction which results in low heating values [72]. Apart from moisture, the high ash content and the changes that occurs with increase in temperature such as melting, slagging, agglomeration, corrosion and emission of heavy metals are problematic in sewage sludge combustion. It is essential to understand the transformation of these inorganic compounds and their behaviours during combustion due to its importance in the operation and maintenance of the reactors. The slagging and agglomeration concerns in sewage sludge combustion is related to both alkali-induced and silicate melt induced deposition of ash on reactor surfaces. This would lead to reduction in thermal efficiency of the process and raise operational cost. Furthermore, the high chlorine content associated with sludge, mostly from iron chloride used in water treatment plants, poses high corrosion risk in the combustor. The final concern associated with sewage sludge ash is heavy metals emission which has adverse effect on health and environment. Studies on co-combustion of sewage sludge with rice husk done by Rong et al. [57] described reduction in the slagging potential of sludge ash due to co-blending with SiO2 rich rice husk. Their observations also includes synergistic interactions in the combustion properties of the co-blended fuels as long as sewage sludge addition remains ≤30 wt%. The high phosphorus content in sewage sludge fly ash enables potential application in agriculture as a fertilizer as established by Niu and Shen [70] but the risk of phosphate formation poses eutrophication threats. Comprehensive explanations of ash related concerns and usage in sewage sludge combustion has been reviewed by others [2,54]. The reduction of up to 15.7% CO and 26.5% NO has been observed by Hao et al. [72] by controlling the operating temperature from 600–1000 °C in an horizontal tube furnace. Studies by Chen et al. [58] where shiitake substrate and Australian black coal were blended with sewage sludge attained improvements in ignition and reductions in NOx and SOx emissions. Similar results were published by Batistella et al. [61] who reduced CO, PAH and NOx by controlling and optimising dryer temperature, oxygen content, and reaction temperature in a multi-stage combustion unit. However, both of these studies revealed increase in SOx emissions from the flue gas.
Some of these benefits and limitations are highlighted in Figure 6.
Several flue gas cleaning and particulate control measures have to be integrated to minimise the release of such metals but some highly volatile elements such as mercury, cadmium and lead may be released as vapour. Furthermore, the use of the subsequent ash or slags for other applications must also be reflected upon, particularly those with high phosphorus contents and negligible toxic compounds such as heavy metals or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) that can be used for agricultural reclamation or in construction industry. Co-use of sludge with other fuels such as coal, biomass, other solid waste, fuel oil or gas has been investigated as a means of avoiding the high cost associated with dedicated reactors, an avenue for reducing net carbon emissions from coal power plants, increasing calorific value and/or improving energy efficiency of the system [62,65,70,73,74]. In these cases, the technical and economic viability of co-utilisation must be studied critically with attention paid to the influence of co-combustion on operational efficiency, pollutants formation, flue gas emissions, and ash related issues in order to meet the acceptable standards for energy, environment and financial profitability throughout its processing stages [75,76].

2.4. Pyrolysis

Pyrolysis is the thermal decomposition or degradation of fuel without any oxidation agent in an inert (non-reactive) environment. It is used for producing bio-oil, solid char and gaseous fuel and referred to as incomplete gasification [77]. It involves the conversion of sewage sludge without air at moderate operating temperature (350–600 °C), although some pyrolysis reactors operating at higher temperature of up to 900 °C exist [78,79]. The output product of this process depends on the process temperature where char yield decreases with an increase in temperature. Therefore, high residence time of the fuel in the reactor at low temperature with slow heating rates promotes char production, while low or high residence time at high temperature promotes liquid and gas production respectively [80]. Nonetheless, application of this technology is mostly used to maximize liquid fuel yield. Figure 7 depicts the schematic of energy recovery from sludge pyrolysis, it can be seen that the drying requirements here are greater than for combustion with <10% moisture tolerance in the input sludge fed into the reactor. The pyrolysis of sludge takes place in an inert environment at high temperatures, hence an external heat source (electric or thermal) would be required for supplying heat for the initiation of the reaction. The utilization of heat sourced from the partial combustion of biogas or bio-oil derived from the process itself has been critically explored for ensuring self-sustainability of pyrolysis, particularly in waste to energy applications. However, there are still various inefficiencies and thermodynamic considerations that have not been well accounted for in systems evaluation, leading to various design flaws in commercial scale plants and exaggerated optimism of self-sufficiency and efficiencies, despite lack of scientific evidence to back this claims [81]. Furthermore, research about the efficiency and cost effectiveness of sludge pyrolysis seems limited to already dried resources, rather than primary sludge. This is associated with the high energy and cost incurred from the drying process. The complexities involved in the pyrolysis reactor has been explained by previous studies which established that the decomposition of sewage sludge occurs in various stages due to the heterogeneous nature of the waste such that after the drying at ≤200 °C, the minor decomposition of decomposable organic matter, dead organisms and lipids follows at 200–300 °C. This is followed by the decomposition of proteins, organic polymers and cellulosic constituents at temperatures ≤700 °C [82,83]. These reaction stages occur simultaneously in reactors (mostly fluidised bed) due to the high heating rates and primarily produce heavy tars, light gases and chars at temperatures <600 °C. Since maximization of liquid product is the desired goal of this technology, further secondary reactions are aided at temperatures around 600 °C such that the unstable primary products go through further pyrolysis to form secondary tar and gases. Other reaction progressions may result into the polymerization of some tars to produce coke. The difference in product distribution and yield characteristics mainly results from fuel characteristics (chemical compositions and particle size), reactor type and operating conditions (temperature, turbulence, residence time, pressure, feed rate and catalyst) as identified by previous studies [2]. These considerations, along with the intricate reaction chemistry, phase transitions and transport phenomena further complicates this energy recovery method. The condensation of the gaseous vapours from the reactor into bio-oil with high heating value of ~33 MJ/kg occurs after cool down [84,85]. Pyrolytic products of bio-oil, biochar and non-condensable gases could all be utilized downstream which is the reason pyrolysis is gaining attention as a zero-waste energy recovery process. The bio-oil can be either used as combustion fuel for heat or electricity generation, refined to be used as liquid fuels or reformed to produce synthesis gas for chemicals production. Similarly, the biogas can be either burnt as fuel or upgraded to synthesis gas that can be processed for liquid fuel or chemical synthesis. Biochar, on the other hand has diverse application from direct combustion as solid fuel, adsorptive capability in catalyst applications and agricultural applications. Although the further use of char is promising, its feasibility is still dependent on its suitability for each usage with respect to energy content, heavy metals and nutrients content. As a result, recent research works have been focussed on optimisation of reactor conditions for maximizing energy recovery, minimising heavy metal emissions as well as the use of biochar as a value-added resource. As investigated by Yi et al. [86], the energy recovery from the use of sewage sludge as a solid fuel and other waste to energy technologies are crucial in the reduction of the greenhouse gas emissions from such wastes, if disposed.
The maximization of the bio-oil yield is the common aim of sewage sludge pyrolysis as the heating value is slightly higher than bio-oil from biomass. However, the bio-oil generated from sewage sludge has >23% moisture content which diminishes the fuel quality by reducing energy density, flame temperature and causing deterrent combustion properties when used in engines in comparison to biomass-derived bio-oil [87,88]. In addition, the high fraction (~33%) of O-containing compounds in the oil significantly limits its thermal output and causes intrinsic instability of the bio-oils which prevents its use as commercial replacement for fuel oil but rather for chemical production [87]. According to literature [89,90,91], liquid yield is maximised between 450–550 °C such that lower temperatures would be inadequate for optimal breakdown of char while higher temperatures favour increase in gas yield due to thermal cracking of tar. Hence, minimisation of residence time has been adopted as an approach to prevent secondary reaction [90,92]. This technology is not suitable for wet sludge because of the influence of moisture on the reactor operating conditions (steam-rich atmosphere), oil quality and increase in non-condensable gases [93]. Interestingly, the use of microwave powered reactors has been studied to enhance the use of high moisture sludge with limited influence on product distribution with or without catalysts [94].
Recent studies utilised various reactor types (e.g., batch, continuous, microwave, fluidized bed and horizontal furnace), operating conditions (e.g., temperature, time, power and catalyst) and fuel (e.g., primary, digested, wet sludge and blends) for optimising pyrolytic product distribution and their quality as seen in Table 4 which summarises results from past studies. The bio-oil yield from sewage sludge pyrolysis ranges from 14–57.5 wt% [95,96,97,98,99,100,101,102,103,104,105]. Pokorna et al. [105] reported a maximum bio-oil yield of 57.5 wt% with water content as low as 10 wt% when flash pyrolysis was conducted at 500 °C in a lab-scale semi-continuous reactor. Likewise, up to 48.5 wt% of bio-oil was reported when flash pyrolysis of dried primary sludge and anaerobically digested sludge was investigated by Alvarez et al. [87] in a conical spouted bed reactor. One of the benefits of the low temperatures for pyrolysis as explained by Jin et al. [97] is the retention of heavy metals in biochar which eliminates transfer of such elements to pyrolytic oil or gas and reduces the potential of toxic emissions. Also, studies by Lee et al. [106] confirmed that the stability of heavy metals and the crystallinity of inorganic compounds are increased by pyrolysis of sludge such that metal leaching ratio reduced to <3.2% at 500 °C. The use of acid pre-treatment and catalysts have been reported to have negligible or negative influence on the bio-oil yield [94,99,107,108]. However, these studies have also observed improvement in quality of the pyrolytic products with catalyst. The pyrolysis of wet sludge (>84 wt% moisture) was studied using a 900 W microwave reactor at 2.4 GHz with maximum bio-oil yield of 20% after 30 min processing at 600 °C [95]. The potential for wet sludge usage directly in thermal reactors, makes microwave technologies highly attractive, however scaling up the technology is still a challenge. As a result, the use of various heating rates, catalysts and reaction temperatures on sewage sludge has been adopted for maximizing liquid products as investigated by various researchers [95,96,97].
However, the bio-oil yield is optimal between 500–600 °C as observed in various studies [94,98,99]. The change in operating temperature, however influences the composition of the bio-oil in terms of the water, aromatic and aliphatic compounds. Regardless of the operating condition, char remains the highest product due the contribution of char and ash (~50 wt%) but offers advantages such as negligible pollutant emission in comparison to incineration because of its low operating temperature and inert atmosphere [98]. As a result, heavy metal emissions and their adverse impact is minimized. Notwithstanding, minimal concentration of some metal species like cadmium and mercury have been detected in pyrolytic oil at temperatures <700 °C due to their low boiling points [100].
The high inorganic compounds in sewage sludge pyrolysis influences the reaction by reducing liquid yield and increasing solid residue due to hindrance of organic matter decomposition by some metal oxides (CaO, ZnO), and promotion of secondary reactions by catalytic species like transitional and alkali and alkaline earth metals [101]. The negative impact of these inorganic elements on the liquid yield establishes the need of pre-treatment process for removing some inorganic matters via leaching or rapid removal of char from the pyrolysis chamber during reaction. The solid char can be used further for heat generation via combustion, as an economic alternative as catalyst, and/or as heavy metal or organic contaminant store (by adsorption). All of which requires further consideration on more attractive and harmless application and/or disposal methods of this char [102]. This concern of heavy metals have been studied by others [97,98,103] who established minimal vaporization of heavy metal during pyrolytic reaction conditions which was characterized by low concentrations of heavy metals in bio-oil and gas and high concentration in the resultant char at different operating temperatures. However, this heavy metal content in char still pose a huge challenge during utilisation or disposal of the biochar as mentioned in Figure 8 which assesses the current status of pyrolysis as a sludge to energy recovery method.
Although the flue gas from this reaction requires less emissions/pollutant clean-up facilities, in comparison to incineration and anaerobic digestion, pyrolysis is a complex process and its economic viability remains dependent on ability to maximize efficiency and produce high valued oil, gas and char that can be furthered processed for heat, chemical and liquid fuels production. Pyrolysis is considered a zero waste technology and has high potential for sustainable energy that resolves all social, economic and environmental concerns but its use for sewage sludge processing is not well established and requires further research on treatments, operating conditions optimization and further minimization of heavy metal in liquid and gaseous products.

2.5. Gasification

The thermochemical conversion of sewage sludge’s organic content into high value gases such as H2 and CO known as synthesis gas, as well as CO2, CH4, H2O and other hydrocarbons is the main basis for gasification. This reaction occurs in a partially oxidized reaction atmosphere at high temperature (800–1000 °C) [113,114,115]. Gasification can be done using air, carbon dioxide, oxygen, steam, or mixtures of such gases. Past studies have identified that the gasifying agent has significant impact on the calorific value of the syngas obtained which ranges from 4–12 MJ/Nm with highest heating value is extracted from the oxy-gasification [116,117]. The product gas can be used directly for heating or electricity generation via heat engine or can be further processed for chemicals or liquid fuel synthesis as illustrated in Figure 9. This process is very similar to combustion with the exception of the lower moisture tolerance in the reactor (<15 wt%) and the deficit in stoichiometric oxidants required for complete combustion. The main output from the reactor are gases and ash. As previously explained, depending on the chemical and mechanical properties, as well as heavy metal contents, the ash generated from this process can be either disposed of at the landfill or reused in agricultural or construction applications. The product gases requires further processing and clean-up for either use in heat and electricity generation or upgrading of synthesis gas for liquid fuels and chemicals synthesis.
Gasification reaction can be divided into four sub-stages which are drying of sample (70–200 °C), devolatilsation (350–600 °C), oxidation of volatiles and char gasification. Hence, it can also be termed as an incomplete combustion or extended pyrolysis reaction in which gas-solid, gas-gas and liquid cracking reactions are required in order to maximize the gaseous product yield.
The use of in-situ drying is only ideal for samples with low moisture content (<15 wt%) [118,119]. After the drying stage, the pyrolysis of the samples is done for generating volatiles and char that can be fully oxidized to drive the other reaction stages. Therefore the oxidation stage (with temperatures up to 1200 °C) produces heat to run the gasification, pyrolysis and drying stage. Finally, the high temperature reduction of the char produced from pyrolysis generates light hydrocarbon gases in the fourth stage. The various reaction mechanisms affects the final product composition. The position of these sub-stages in the gasifier immensely affects the flow of gasifying agent, reaction process and operating efficiency, thereby becoming a deciding factor in the choice of reactors. There are three main types of gasifiers—fixed bed downdraft, fixed bed updraft and fluidized bed gasifier and detailed comparison can be found elsewhere [78,120]. In summary, the fixed bed alignment involves a flow of gasifying agent and heat up or down the reactor chambers to activate the drying, pyrolysis and gasifying stages consecutively. This leads to efficiency reduction and shorter residence time (particularly for char oxidation which is the rate-limiting step) in comparison to the fluidized bed that allows instantaneous occurresnce of all sub-stages which allows completion of the gasification process [121]. The reactor type also affects the tar and pollutant concentration in the product which hinders the efficiency of the process.
Table 5 summarises past studies on sewage sludge gasification with emphasis on different gasifying agents, reaction conditions, and catalyst use. Their results emphasizes the dependence of the end product on the sludge properties and the experimental conditions. Interestingly, the parametric considerations in sewage sludge gasification are mostly operating conditions such as equivalence ratio (ER), gas residence time, catalytic influences and operating temperature. The optimization of these factors are required for maximizing gas yield, enhancing gas quality, minimizing tar yield and increasing reaction efficiency. The reaction of sewage sludge with low (<0.2) or high (>0.5) equivalence ratio results in low gasification efficiency. Lower ER promotes incomplete gasification with high liquid tar and solid char fractions as end product whereas higher ER leads to a well oxidized environment that enhances complete combustion of a higher fraction of the char and tar, thereby generating more CO2, H2O and heat energy at the expense of synthesis gas and their calorific value [122,123,124]. This has been reported by others who studied influence of ER on the tar and syngas yield such that tar content decreased, syngas yield reduced at high ER [125,126,127]. Their findings deduced an optimal ER between 0.2–0.4 for maximizing the production of CO, H2, CH4 and other light hydrocarbons and increasing efficiency. As briefly mentioned earlier, the impact of residence time is crucial in ensuring complete gasification, hence a longer residence time of the gas would allow more char conversion to take place in the reactor [128]. This would also enhance cracking of tar, heavier volatiles and steam reforming which improves the quality and quantity of produced syngas. Nipattummakul et al. [129] established that gaseous product of sludge gasification increases with increasing temperatures for maximising synthesis gas yields. Similarly, the adoption of various catalysts (nickel, dolomite, zeolite, olivine and alumina) have been studied for improving gasification of sewage sludge, particularly for reducing tar content [113,130,131]. It was observed that dolomite was quite effective in eliminating tar yield and the combination of dolomite with activated carbon as bed material maximized H2 yield [130,132]. Roche et al. [113] reported >20% increase in hydrogen yield and high reductions in the tar content of the gasifier outputs by the use of dolomite. Similar observations have been detected using Ca–, Fe– and Ni– based catalyst for enhancing char gasification, methane reforming and tar cracking reactions [133,134]. These catalysts have also been established to have pollutant reduction properties [133]. The use of nickel based catalyst have indicated high tar reduction and lower NOx formation, however the deactivation of such catalyst at high temperatures from coke deposition remains a challenge [131,135]. The integration of an intermediate torrefaction inter-stage between drying and gasification has been proposed for the removal of a fraction of Nitrogen content and minimisation of NOx emission generated from the subsequent use of the product stream (gases) from the gasifier [29]. Finally, the influence of the bed temperature on the distribution of yields, gas quality and process efficiency have been previously studied such that lower temperatures favour tar and char production while higher temperatures favour gas yield and overall efficiency of process [123,131,136]. This temperature must not only increase the quantity but also the quality of syngas generated while ensuring that the tar reduction is maximised at higher temperatures [137]. In addition, this high temperature must be well considered to avoid clinker formation.
Nonetheless, the main challenges of sludge gasification are ash related issues due to the high content of inorganic constituents, tar minimisation and sludge composition (moisture, heavy metals, nitrogen and sulphur). The high content of ash in sewage sludge has a lot of adverse influence on gasifier operation, specifically sintering, agglomeration and clinker formation which leads to frequent shut down and maintenance of the reactor [118,141]. Furthermore, low ash fusion temperature also leads to blockage of the fuel flow which reduces the heat transfer potential and gas quality [125]. In addition, the probable volatization of gas phase compounds of the toxic inorganic elements like heavy metals at high temperatures (750–1100 °C) results in deposition [142,143,144,145].
Nonetheless, gasification also helps with fixing heavy metals such as lead, chromium and nickel and reducing volatility of such compounds in residual ash [146,147,148]. The presence of tar in the product distribution presents a two-way issue in sludge gasification. At first, tar generated is related to reduction in gaseous product, condensation of such tar leads to clogging, fouling and other inefficient downstream issues. Secondly, the need for tar removal from the syngas is a necessity which must be done either inside the gasifier (experimental conditions optimisation or catalyst) and/or after the gasifier (post-reaction clean up using scrubbers). These processes leads to additional capital and operational costs but the external clean-up method is the most expensive [149,150]. The use of fuel blends for gasification was also studied for the maximization of hydrogen and synthesis gas yield [151]. Finally, the impact of fuel properties such as moisture content results in promotion of tar generation and additional energy requirements for drying the sludge. This affects the operation of the reactor, product distribution and the quality of the product gas. Also, the high nitrogen and sulphur content promotes ammonia, hydrogen cyanide and hydrogen sulphide formation which are toxic pollutants during the operation of the gasifier. The evaluation summary of this technology is depicted in Figure 10.

3. Conclusions and Future Perspectives

This review work identifies the potential of municipal sludge as an energy feedstock. However, the complex composition of this resource remains its main limitation due to high moisture, ash, toxic heavy metals and organic contaminants which influences the safety of final products, increases energy/resource requirements, reduces the process efficiency and increases the overall cost of technology. The poor conversion efficiencies, long reaction time, adverse environmental impacts of digestates associated with anaerobic digestion are a major constraint in terms of cost and environmental sustainability but this is still the most appealing technology till date due to its low capital costs and lack of drying requirements. Although, these benefits may be offset by the cost and availability of resource needed for various pre-/post- or inter-stage treatment methods used for improving its conversion efficiencies. In comparison, combustion, pyrolysis and gasification technologies requires energy-intensive drying, expensive emission control, ash disposal or reuse strategies, and further downstream gas treatment for pollutant mitigation. These drawbacks increase the complexities, investment costs and reduce the energy conversion efficiency of these technologies. This has drawn attention to technologies such as microwave reactors which have shown some tolerance for sludge with moderately high moisture contents, but these systems have scale-up issues and their energy conversion efficiency is low. All considered technologies in this work show the need further research and development into co-utilization of sludge, operating condition optimization and effective technology scale-up for maximizing energy recovered while reducing cost and emissions.
An interesting observation is the lack of data to accurately back the high efficiency of most pyrolysis and gasification systems as they fail to account for the energy intensive pre-processing stage which offsets a considerable fraction of the recovered energy and could lead to negative energy balance. As a result, innovative pathways and research using these technologies commercially are required such as coupling of biochemical and thermochemical systems to optimise energy recovery. This could be easily conceptualised as an integrated biorefinery approach which can be designed appropriately for the maximization of energy outputs to reduce adverse environmental impacts. Regardless, all these processes must be tailored to suit individual locations and would require in-depth technical, economic and life cycle assessment for determining their sustainability in the low carbon future.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, J.O. and K.S.; methodology, J.O. and Y.G.; resources, J.O., Y.G and X.L.; writing—original draft preparation, J.O.; writing—review and editing, J.O, K.S., X.L., Y.G. and T.W.; supervision, T.W.; project administration, K.S. and T.W.; funding acquisition, K.S. and T.W.

Funding

The scientific work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (51606106), Ningbo Natural Science Foundation (2017A610233), Ningbo Municipal Key Laboratory on Clean Energy Conversion Technologies, and the National Key R&D Program of China (2017YFB0602602 and 2017YFC0210400).

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Potential Sludge-to-Energy Recovery Routes (drawn from information gathered from [1,2,4,5,6]).
Figure 1. Potential Sludge-to-Energy Recovery Routes (drawn from information gathered from [1,2,4,5,6]).
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Figure 2. Biological Processes during Anaerobic Digestion of Sludge (based on information from [11]).
Figure 2. Biological Processes during Anaerobic Digestion of Sludge (based on information from [11]).
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Figure 3. Schematic representation of the anaerobic digestion of sludge.
Figure 3. Schematic representation of the anaerobic digestion of sludge.
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Figure 4. Technological, Socio-environmental and Economic Assessment of Anaerobic Digestion for Sludge Processing.
Figure 4. Technological, Socio-environmental and Economic Assessment of Anaerobic Digestion for Sludge Processing.
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Figure 5. Schematic Representation of the Combustion of sludge.
Figure 5. Schematic Representation of the Combustion of sludge.
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Figure 6. Technological, Socio-environmental and Economic Assessment of Combustion for Sludge Processing.
Figure 6. Technological, Socio-environmental and Economic Assessment of Combustion for Sludge Processing.
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Figure 7. Schematic Representation of the Pyrolysis of Sludge.
Figure 7. Schematic Representation of the Pyrolysis of Sludge.
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Figure 8. Technological, Socio-environmental and Economic Assessment of Pyrolysis for Sludge Processing.
Figure 8. Technological, Socio-environmental and Economic Assessment of Pyrolysis for Sludge Processing.
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Figure 9. Schematic Representation of the Gasification of Sludge.
Figure 9. Schematic Representation of the Gasification of Sludge.
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Figure 10. Technological, Socio-environmental and Economic Assessment of Gasification for Sludge Processing.
Figure 10. Technological, Socio-environmental and Economic Assessment of Gasification for Sludge Processing.
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Table 1. Summary of key research on anaerobic digestion and pre-treatment methods.
Table 1. Summary of key research on anaerobic digestion and pre-treatment methods.
Author(s)Fuel Types InvestigatedReactor Type UsedTreatment MethodsObservations
Devlin et al. [32]Thickened waste activated sludge and inoculum sludge (15–20 days old)Full scale, semi-continuous (12 days) anaerobic digester at 15 days hydraulic retention time (HRT) at 35 °CAcid pre-treatment—HCl for attaining pH 6–1 (chemical)Optimal acid dosing for attaining pH of 2 obtained same biogas yield in 13 digestion days versus 21 days required for untreated sludge. 14.3% increase in methane yield.
Lin et al. [37]Pulp and Paper sludgeBatch reactor at 42 days HRT at 37 °CAlkali pre-treatment—4 g/8 g/16 g NaOH/100 g total solid sludge (chemical)54–88% increase in methane production with 8 g NaOH being the optimal amount of pre-treatment chemical. Alkaline pre-treatment can be more suitable for soluble chemical oxygen demands (COD) degradation (83–93%)
Weemaes et al. [38]Sewage Sludge (7 days old)Batch reactor at 30 days HRT at 33 °COzonation at 10–50 mg O3/l gas for up to 3 h 38 min to get 0.05 g/0.1 g/0.2 g O3/g CODPartial oxidation was promoted by the ozonation reaction which increased methane production by a factor of 1.8. Digestion rate accelerated by a factor of 2.2. Optimal ozone dose of 0.1 g O3/g COD.
Valo et al. [19]Waste activated sludgeContinuous reactor at 20 days HRT at 35 °CAlkali pre-treatment: pH 10–12 (KOH)21.4% increase in soluble COD with increase in pH from 10 to 12
Valo et al. [19]Waste activated sludgeContinuous reactor at 20 days HRT at 35 °CThermo-chemical pre-treatment—130 °C and 170 °C for 30–60 min, pH 10–12 (KOH)21.3% increase in soluble COD at 130 °C, further 32% increase in SCOD at 170 °C at pH 10. SCOD reaches 83% for pH 12 sludge at 170 °C. 72–78% increase in biogas yield, 36.4% increase in COD removal was achieved.
Takashima and Tanaka [39]Anaerobically digested sludgeBatch reactor at 20 days HRT at 35 °CThermo-chemical post-treatment—25 °C 100 °C and 180 °C for 1 h, pH 2/4/6 (HCl)Methane production increased from 0.11 g COD-CH4 to 0.18, 0.25 and 0.32 g COD-CH4 at 25, 100 and 180 °C. Volatile soluble solid destruction also increased by 6.7, 11.3 and 26% respectively.
Takashima and Tanaka [39]Anaerobically digested sludgeContinuous reactor at 20 days HRT at 35 °CThermo-chemical post-treatment—170 °C for 1 h, pH 5–6 (HCl and H2SO4)Methane production increased by 14–21%. Volatile soluble solid destruction also increased by a factor of 2–2.5. Optimal dose of 3.3mmol HCl or 1.8 mmol H2SO4 per day.
Nielsen et al. [18]Waste activated sludge and inoculum sludgeBatch reactor for 40 days or two-steps of 19–21 days each in inter-stage at 37 °CThermal pre- and inter-stage treatment at moderate temperature: water bath at 80 °CPre-treatment: total volatile solid increased from 2 to 29%. Inter-stage: total volatile solid increased from 2 to 27%.
Nielsen et al. [18]Waste activated sludge and inoculum sludgeBatch reactor for 40 days or two-steps of 19–21 days each in inter-stage at 37 °CThermal pre- and inter-stage treatment at high temperature at 130–170 °CPre-treatment: total volatile solid increased from 2 to 17% at 130 °C and 44% at 170 °C. Methane yield increased by 13% and 9% respectively. Inter-stage: total volatile solid increased from 2 to 25% and 57% at 130 °C and 170 °C respectively with 9 and 29% increase in methane yield.
Nielsen et al. [18]Waste activated sludge and inoculum sludgeBatch reactor for 40 days or two-steps of 19–21 days each in inter-stage at 37 °CThermochemical pre- and inter-stage treatment at 170 °C, pH 10 using KOHPre-treatment: total volatile solid increased from 2 to 68% at 170 °C. Methane yield increased by 2%. Inter-stage: total volatile solid increased from 2 to 74% and 28% increase in methane yield.
Riau et al. [33]Waste activated sludge and inoculum sludgeTwo batch reactors for 20 days solid retention time (SRT) at 55 °C (thermophilic) and 35 °C (mesophilic)Mechanical pre- and inter-stage treatment using sonication at 24 KHz, 400 W at 5–10 minTotal methane production increased by 42%, volatile solid removal by 13% and SCOD elimination was increased by 22%.
Martín et al. [34]Sewage SludgeBatch reactor at 35 °C for 10 daysMechanical pre-treatment using sonication at 150 W at 0–60 min38–91% soluble COD fraction. 64–95% increase in methane yield with optimal enhancement at 45 min sonication.
Houtmeyers et al. [35]Thickened sludge (500 g)Semi-continuous reactor at 20 days HRT for 67 days at 37 °CMechanical pre-treatment using ultrasonic pre-treatment at 100 W at 8 min1741% increase in soluble COD fraction. 24% increase in Sludge removal. 27% increase in biogas yield
Houtmeyers et al. [35]Thickened sludge (500 g)Semi-continuous reactor at 20 days HRT for 67 days at 37 °CPhysiochemical pre-treatment using microwave radiation at 800 W at 2.45 ghz for 1 min117% increase in soluble COD fraction. 45% increase in Sludge removal. 20% increase in biogas yield
Ebenezer et al. [40]Activated SludgeBatch reactor at 35 °C for 35 daysPhysiochemical pre-treatment using microwave radiation at 900 W at 2.45 ghz for 30–300 s (40–96 °C)950% increase in soluble COD fraction. 47% increase in biodegradability. Increase in biogas yield.
Coelho et al. [41]Thickened sludge10 semi-continuous reactors for 20 days at 55 °C (thermophilic) and 35 °C (mesophilic)Physiochemical pre-treatment using microwave radiation at 1250 W at 2.45 ghz for 6 min63–207% increase in biogas production. 50% increase in volatile solid removal.
Appels et al. [42]Activated SludgeSemi-continuous reactor at 20 days HRT—42 days at 37 °CPhysiochemical pre-treatment using microwave radiation at 800 W at 2.45 ghz for 3.5 min214% increase in soluble COD fraction. 50% Increase in biogas yield. 67% increase in solids removal.
Wilson et al. [43]Mixed sludgeSemi-continuous reactor at 15–20 days SRT at 37–42 °CThermal hydrolysis pre-treatment at 150–170 °C, 4.8–7.9 bar.56–62% reduction in volatile solid in digestate. 24–59% increase in biogas production
Pilli et al. [44]Primary, Secondary and mixed sludgeSemi-continuous reactor at 30 days SRT at 35 °CThermal pre-treatment using hydrolyser at 134–140 °C, 3.4 bar for 30 min.12.6% reduction in volatile solid in digestate. 40.2% increase in methane production
Xue et al. [45]dewatered sludge (high solid sludge)Batch reactor at 28 days SRT at 37 °CThermal pre-treatment using low temperature hydrolysis at 60–90 °C, for 1–72 h557–1678% increase in SCOD, negligible change in biogas yield. Optimal SRT of 18–20 days
Xue et al. [45]dewatered sludge (high solid sludge)batch reactor at 28 days SRT at 37 °CThermal pre-treatment using high temperature hydrolysis at 120–180 °C, for 15–180 min582–1087% increase in SCOD, 6.3–16.5% increase in biogas yield. SRT reduction to 12–14 days
Table 2. Advantages and disadvantages of various sludge pre-treatment methods.
Table 2. Advantages and disadvantages of various sludge pre-treatment methods.
Chemical (Acid or Alkali Treatment)Chemical (Ozonation)UltrasonicationMicrowave IrradiationThermal Treatment
Pro(s)Methane yield increaseMethane yield increaseMethane yield increaseMethane yield increasemethane yield increase
Simple and easy to integrateFlexible operationLow cost pre-treatment methodFast and uniform heating processReduce sludge volume
Low cost pre-treatment methodReduced sludge volumeEasy maintenanceEasy to controlImproves dewater-ability
Con(s)High cost of chemicalsHigh energy requirementsHigh energy requirementsHigh energy requirementsHigh energy requirements
Special reactor requirementsMineralization potential of cellular matterUnsuitable for lignocellulosic biomassScale up challengesHigh capital cost
Toxicity of some alkali like Na+---Potential for ammonia generation
Table 3. Summary of key research on combustion of sewage sludge.
Table 3. Summary of key research on combustion of sewage sludge.
Author(s)Fuel Types InvestigatedReactor Type UsedObservations
Hao et al. [72]Thermally dried (TD) and bio-dried (BD) sewage sludge (50–450 µm)Horizontal tube furnace for isothermal combustion at 600–1000 °C (air, 10 min)Removal of ~26% more moisture in BDSS resulted in higher LHV (37.9%), higher combustion index and prevents incomplete combustion. ~20% and 15.7% less nitrogenous gas and CO emission in the flue gas. Up to 26.5% less NO but increase in SO2 emitted in BDSS in comparison to TDSS.
Niu and Shen [68]Dewatered Sewage sludge (200–450 µm)Quartz fluidized bed for chemical looping combustion at 850–950 °C (5 vol% O2 in N2 and reduced by 8 vol% CO, 15 min)High Phosphorus (66.8–69.3%) availability in fly ash from sewage sludge processing with potential to use as fertilizer. However, The high P content influences the activity of the hematite oxygen carrier in the reaction. Ca and Fe in sludge ash promoted the reduction reactivity of the hematite.
Cheng et al. [69]Air dried Municipal sewage sludge (80–120 µm)Thermogravimetric analyzer (TGA) at 800 °C, 40 °C/min (100 mL/min N2 with 0–20% O2)Main difference in the reaction in inert atmosphere and slightly oxygenated atmosphere is in the char and ash combustion zone. ~10 vol% O2 was adequate for complete combustion of char particles, although at higher temperature range in comparison to 15 and 20 vol%.
Chen et al. [70]Rice husk and sewage sludgeMuffle furnace at 600 & 750 °C for sewage sludge and rice husk/sewage sludge ashHigh Fe and heavy metals in sewage sludge ash. In the rice husk/sewage sludge blend, heavy metals were stabilized, reducing emission and retention in ash. Mechanical properties of the ash derived from co-combustion has potential use as cement material substitute.
Kijo-Kleczkowska, et al. [62]Sewage sludge; brown and hard coal; pine and straw (as pellets)Bench reactor at 800–900 °C in airVisually detected reaction time—Coal (403–700 s) > Sewage Sludge (200 s) > Biomass (80–100 s). Volatiles / Char combustion time—Coal (9–20; 77–88%); Sludge (23/73%); biomass (26–27; 68–70%) of reaction time. However, the volatiles oxidation is the most important stage for biomass and sludge combustion. Optimisation of reactor temperature and air flow velocity for different particle size such that at 7.5 mm, sludge requires 800–800 °C and 2.8 m/s to minimise ignition time and surface temperature of fuel while ensuring burnout. This could be used to match fuels that can be co-blended together i.e., brown coal or willow with 800–850 °C and 2.8 m/s optimal condition.
Batistella et al. [61]Dewatered sewage sludgePilot scale Rotary dryer (128–354 °C) with Moving bed combustor at 700–800 °C (Inlet); 950–1150 °C (post combustion)CO emission was negligible from the combustor, however the dehydration process at lower temperature emits CO. This was reduced by controlling and optimizing the oxygen content (from exhaust gas) and temperature of the dryer.
The NOx emissions remained below standard limits by optimising excess air, air/fuel feed rate and maintaining low reaction temperature. The high temperature in the post combustion chamber aided decomposition of PAH in flue gas. Low calcium content of fuel resulted in higher SOx emission and high particulate matter.
Lin et al. [63]Activated sewage sludge and dewatered oil shale blends at 10, 30, 50, 70, 90 wt% sludge (<178 µm)Thermogravimetric analyzer (TGA) at 1000 °C, 10–30 °C/min (80 mL/min air)Blending with sewage sludge resulted in easier ignition properties due to its higher volatile content. Ash content increased due to higher ash of oil shale. Blends with 10 wt% sludge resulted in combustion promotion by reducing activation energy.
Huang et al. [64]Sewage sludge and water hyacinth blends at 10, 20, 30 and 40 wt% water hyacinthTGA at 1000 °C, 10–40 °C/min (50 mL/min CO2/O2)Drying and combustion reaction zone of sewage sludge was improved by blending with water hyacinth, enhancing reactivity.
Wang et al. [65]Sewage sludge and bituminous coal blends at 5–50 wt% (<75 µm).TGA at 900 °C, 20 °C/min (80 mL/min N2/O2).
5% catalyst (CaO, CeO2, MnO2 and Fe2O3)
The blending of sewage sludge with coal at high fractions (>10 wt%) deteriorated the combustion characteristics of the blends in comparison to coal.
The use of catalysts, particularly Ce- and Fe-based, drastically improved the ignition and combustion properties of the blends.
Kijo-Kleczkowska et al. [66]Sewage sludge blended with lignite, hard coal and willow at 50:50 wt% (as pellets)Bench reactor at 800–900 °C in airVolatiles / Char combustion time—Sludge + lignite (24; 73%); Sludge + hard coal (13/84%); sludge + willow (28; 67%) of reaction time. Blending with sludge reduces ignition time especially in coal samples, extends the reaction time for biomass blend and maximum surface temperature.
Deng et al. [67]Sewage sludge and wheat straw blends at 20–80 wt% biomass (<200 µm)TGA at 1000 °C, 20 °C/min (100 mL/min N2/O2).The addition of wheat straw to sewage sludge improves the char combustion reactivity and heat released due to changes in physiochemical properties such as higher surface area and pore volume of the pyrolytic char.
Table 4. Summary of key research on pyrolysis of sewage sludge.
Table 4. Summary of key research on pyrolysis of sewage sludge.
Author(s)Fuel types InvestigatedReactor Type UsedObservations
Alvarez et al. [87]Sewage sludge (0.5–3 mm)
(Anaerobic digested and thermally dried before use)
Conical spouted bed reactor at 450, 500 and 600 °C with <100 ms residence time (fast pyrolysis)Bio-oil yields was 44.8, 48.5 and 45.4 wt% at 450, 500 and 600 °C. Liquid yield was maximised at 500 °C due to low volatile residence time and lack of secondary cracking reactions. Char and gas were highest at 450 °C and 600 °C respectively. The fuel properties differ from hydrocarbon and biomass derived oils, hence more suitable for chemical production.
Jin et al. [97]Sewage sludgeHomemade pyrolysis and carbonization furnace (400–600 °C) for 60 minBiochar yield decreased from 60.6 to 53.1% with increasing temperatures. High concentration of heavy metals retained in biochar. Biochar has lower surface area in comparison to other adsorbents due to pore blockages by tar. Decrease in the amount of bioavailable heavy metals while oxidative and residual fractions increased which indicates lower levels of ecological risks with biochar disposal or usage
Gao et al. [96]Dried sewage sludgeHorizontal tubular furnace reactor (2 L/min N2 at 450–650 °C. slow and fast pyrolysis at 8 and 100 °C/min)Fast Pyrolysis—Char yield reduced from 47.07 to 29.96% with increasing temperature. Tar yield increased to maximum (46.14%) at 550 °C and then decreased with further increase in temperature. Gas yield increases with increase in temperature.
Slow Pyrolysis—Decrease in char (33.24–53.6%) and tar (32.18–38.28%) and increase in gases (14.24–28.64%) due to secondary cracking reactions.
Lin et al. [95]Wet sludge (84.9 ± 1.2 wt% water)Multimode microwave reactor (900 W, 200 mL/min N2, 400–800 °C for 30 min)Gas phase: 15–29%; Liquid phase: 14–20%; and
Solid fraction: 57–69%. The maximum yield and heating value (HV) of bio-oil was obtained at 600 °C and the HV 2.7 times of the dried sludge cake. Microwave processing is promising for sludge.
Park et al. [104]Digested and dried sewage sludgeFluidized bed reactor (3 kW, 200 mL/min N2, 446–720 °C for 30 min)Maximum of 54 wt% of bio-oil was obtained with HV of about 2 times that of the dried sewage sludge
HV of gas and char ranged from 5–30 and 5–10 MJ/Kg. The bio-oil has negligible hazardous metals but has very high N content.
Pokorna et al. [105]Thickened excess activated sludge (AKP), dewatered digested sludge (DIG), and dried excessive activated sludge (OLDA)Semi-continuous lab scale flash pyrolysis reactor at 500 °CBio-oil yields varies between 39.2–57.5%. The water content of bio-oil varies between 10.3–17% based on the sludge type. HV ranged between 23.9–29.0 MJ/kg for bio-oil and 5.2–10.6 MJ/kg for char.
Kim and Parker [107]Primary sewage sludge, thickened waste activated sludge and digested sludge bio-solidsCylindrical batch pyrolysis reactor at 250–500° C with zeolite as catalyst and acid pre-treatment.Calorific value of 32–42MJ/kg and 7–23MJ/kg for bio-oil and char respectively. Oil yield ranges between 4–42% with maximum at 500 °C for primary sludge. Other types of sludge generated maximum oil at ~400 °C. Char yield varies between 33–87% with maximum at 250 °C. The use of zeolite reduces char yield but does not impact the oil yield considerably. Pre-treatment did not enhance the bio-oil yield. Most economically viable option is the use of primary sludge at 500 °C.
Zhou et al. [99]Sewage sludge (78% water content)Benchtop batch and continuous microwave reactor (1000 W and 2.45 GHz at 450–600 °C) with HZSM-5 catalystBio-oil yield ranges from 16.47–39 wt% with maximum at 550 °C. Char yield decreased from 62.26–32.98 wt% with increasing temperature. The continuous reactor increased bio-oil yields by ~16%. The use of HZSM-5 decreased the bio-oil generated in both reactors.
Fonts et al. [109]Digested and dried sewage sludgeLab scale fluidized bed reactor at 450–650 °C, 3.5–5.5 L/min and feed rate of 3–6 g/min for 75 minSolid, liquid and gas yields are between 46.1–63.0%, 23.4–40.7% and 7.3–27.9% respectively with maximum yield at 450, 550 and 650, respectively. The feed rate and N2 flow rate does not affect the liquid yield, low feed rate and N2 flow rate enhances solid yield.
Ischia et al. [108]Sewage SludgeTGA at 1000 °C, 10 °C/min (80 mL/min He). Clay catalyst.52 wt% mass reduction up to 600 °C with evolved gases mostly hydrocarbons. With clay as catalyst, concentration of CO reduced with higher CO2.
Pedroza et al. [91]Dried sewage sludgeContinuous feed rotating cylinder reactor (500–600 °C, 50 mL/min Nitrogen, 4–22 g/min mass)High temperature increases gas fraction with 23.9% gas yield at 600 °C with 56% synthesis gas concentration. Decrease in char with increasing temperature with lowest of 52.7% at 600 °C. Bio-oil yield was maximum at 500 °C with 10.5%.
Gao et al. [98]Dried sewage sludgeContinuous feed screw reactor (500–800 °C; 6–46 min residence time; Nitrogen, 4–100 g/min mass)Char yield reduces by ~9 wt% while gas yield increases by ~9 wt% with 40 min increase in residence time. Bio-oil yield increased by ~3% with 17min increase but decreased afterwards. Optimal residence time for char conversion and bio-oil maximization was determined to be 23 min. Gas and char yield increases and decreases with increase in temperature respectively while bio-oil increases till 700 °C then decreased drastically at 800 °C. The ecological risk of char obtained remained moderate in comparison to the fuel ash.
Ma et al. [110]Dewatered high ash sludge (88.10wt% moisture)Microwave reactor at 0.7–1 kW with 10 mL/min Nitrogen (SiC, graphite and residue absorbent)Biogas (10.74–16.93%), bio-oil (2.98–3.52%) and biochar (78.27–84.30%) yield with various absorbents. Pyrolysis with SiC and graphite gave the highest biogas and bio-oil yield respectively. Biochar and biogas yield reduced and increased with increasing input power.
Xie et al. [94]Sewage sludgeMicrowave oven of 750 W at 2.45 GHz with HZSM-5 catalyst from 450–600 °CMaximum yield of bio-oil was achieved at 550 °C. The oil and gas yield are maximum without the use of catalyst while char yield increased with catalyst loading. However, the quality of bio-oil (lowest oxygen- and nitrogen-containing compounds) was improved at catalyst to feed ratio of 2:1.
Huang et al. [111]Dry sewage sludge cake and rice strawSingle mode Microwave at 2.45 GHzThe use of rice straw enhanced microwave absorption and efficiency of the reaction. The need for further study is required for establishing feasibility of microwave co-pyrolysis.
Chen et al. [112]Dried Digested Sewage SludgeFixed bed Tubular furnace, 700 mL/min N2, 450 °C, 60 minMaximum pyrolytic oil yield of 10.19 wt%. The heating rate, temperature, residence time and nitrogen flow rate affects the yield.
Table 5. Summary of key research on gasification of sewage sludge.
Table 5. Summary of key research on gasification of sewage sludge.
Author(s)Fuel Types InvestigatedReactor Type UsedObservations
Choi et al. [133]Digested sewage sludgeThree stage gasifier (auger (650 °C), fluidized bed (815 °C) and tar cracking (815 °C) reactors connected serially), gasifying agent—pre-heated air, Catalyst—activated carbon, ER—0.3The use of activated carbon increase syngas yield by 12%, while reducing tar, hydrogen sulphide and ammonia content in the syngas. In addition, the carbon conversion and tar removal efficiency increased by 10 and 26% respectively. The use of Fe- and Ni-impregnated activated carbon reduced the hydrogen sulphide and ammonia respectively. Increasing the gasification time (~8 h) effectively removed tar in output.
Roche et al. [113]Dried SludgeLaboratory scale fluidized bed gasifier (800 °C), gasifying agent—air + steam, ER—0.3, Catalyst—dolomite, feed rate—110—322 kg/h m2Different feed rate influenced the quality and composition of the tar generated. Higher feed rate decreased syngas yield while increasing tar content while lower feed rate maximized H2 and CO in product. The use of dolomite enhanced tar removal efficiency to ~71%. 20–36% increase in H2 yield with dolomite.
Nipattummakul et al. [131]Solar dried sewage sludgeLaboratory scale fixed bed gasifier (700–1000 °C), gasifying agent—steam (3 g/min)Char gasification, H2 and CO content of the producer gas increased with increasing temperature. Energy conversion efficiency was maximum at 1000 °C.
Manyà et al. [138]Digested sewage sludgeLaboratory scale fluidized bed gasifier (750–850 °C), gasifying agent—air, ER—0.25–0.35, alumina bedThe heating value and cold gas efficiency increased with increasing temperature, attributed to steam reforming and cracking of tar. The gas yield increased with increasing ER. H2 content of syngas increases with the alumina bed.
Chen et al. [134]Sewage sludgeLaboratory scale fixed bed gasifier (650–850 °C), gasifying agent—steam (0.2 g/min), Catalyst—calcium oxide(CaO), Ni- and Fe-impregnated CaOWithout the CaO sorbents, hydrogen fraction and overall syngas yield increases with increase temperature. The use of CaO at lower temperatures increased the H2 fraction by enhancing tar cracking, however CaO with higher temperatures, the H2 fraction reduced while CO2 increased. Though carbon conversion efficiency and cold gas efficiency increased with CaO use, it had negligible influence on char gasification but on tar cracking. The impregnation of metals improved methane reforming and char conversion.
Lee et al. [139]Dried sewage sludgeLaboratory scale gasifier (1000 °C), gasifying agent—steam (2.5–20 g/min)Higher reaction temperature improved water gas shift reaction rates, hence CO2 and H2 generation rates increased at the expense of CO and CH4 with time. Increase in steam flow rate increased the syngas generation rates at lower residence time. Carbon conversion is enhanced with higher steam flow rate.
Freda et al. [140]Oven-dried sewage SludgeBench scale rotary Kiln gasifier, 750—850 °C, ER 0.05–0.24Producer gas of higher heating value was obtained at temperatures of 800–850 °C and ER of 0.15–0.24. Maximum cold gas efficiency of 67% was obtained at 850 °C with ER of 0.16

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Oladejo, J.; Shi, K.; Luo, X.; Yang, G.; Wu, T. A Review of Sludge-to-Energy Recovery Methods. Energies 2019, 12, 60. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12010060

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Oladejo J, Shi K, Luo X, Yang G, Wu T. A Review of Sludge-to-Energy Recovery Methods. Energies. 2019; 12(1):60. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12010060

Chicago/Turabian Style

Oladejo, Jumoke, Kaiqi Shi, Xiang Luo, Gang Yang, and Tao Wu. 2019. "A Review of Sludge-to-Energy Recovery Methods" Energies 12, no. 1: 60. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12010060

APA Style

Oladejo, J., Shi, K., Luo, X., Yang, G., & Wu, T. (2019). A Review of Sludge-to-Energy Recovery Methods. Energies, 12(1), 60. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12010060

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