The resulting mixture is brownish in color and viscous. Does it have a special name? “It doesn't actually,” said Matthias Preußner, going on to explain that what's important is its flowability, which he can influence with other ingredients. “If the mixture's too runny, we just add a bit of stale flour,” grinned the amateur chef.
Biogas produced from food waste fuels CHP modules
The biomass is subject to a sanitation process taking one hour at 70°C. Non-organic substances are removed, and then it is transported to the fermenter, in which carbohydrates, proteins and fats are converted to methane by means of micro-organisms. Iron hydroxide is also added during fermentation to eliminate the hydrogen sulfide.
It takes around another 100 days in the fermenter before the food waste begins to produce biogas. This is then transported via active carbon filters to one of the two mtu CHP modules which uses it to deliver 800 kW of heat and electrical power – and with great reliability.
"We had a replacement engine within six weeks"
Matthias Preußner is not only full of praise for the technical superiority of the plant, but for Rolls-Royce service, that has come to his assistance on many occasions. He particularly recalls an incident with the engine in early 2023. “We flooded the engine room with Ad Blue,” he joked, suddenly becoming more reflective: “The Ad-Blue tank above the engine came from a third-party manufacturer, and it wasn’t properly secure. We arrived one morning to find the whole of the CHP plant covered in Ad Blue. The engine was a goner.” He was able to continue using the twin CHP module, but one unit was not sufficient for utilizing all the biogas. Energor, however, had the protection of a service contract, and Matthias Preußner remains grateful to the Rolls-Royce service team to this day: “We got the replacement in under six weeks,” he said. And energy production got back into full swing.