How Produce CNG from Biogas: Methods and Application

 

What is Biogas vs Bio-CNG?

  • Producing CNG from biogas is basically upgrading raw biogas into Bio-CNG (Compressed Biomethane, CBM) by removing impurities and compressing methane to high pressure. Here’s a clear, engineering-focused explanation.
  • Producing CNG from biogas (commonly called Bio-CNG or Compressed Biomethane – CBM) is an important clean-energy solution, especially in India where agricultural and organic waste is abundant. Below is a structured, engineering-focused guide covering methods and applications.

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  • Biogas composition:
    • Methane (CHâ‚„): 50–65%
    • COâ‚‚: 35–45%
    • Traces: Hâ‚‚S, moisture, siloxanes
  • CNG / Bio-CNG requirement:
    • Methane ≥ 90–95%
    • High calorific value
    • Compressed at 200–250 bar

So, the goal is purification + compression

 Step-by-Step Process to Convert Biogas to CNG

 Step 1: Biogas Production

  • Source: cow dung, food waste, agricultural waste, sewage
  • Process: Anaerobic digestion
  • Output: Raw biogas

BIO-SLURRY

 Step 2: H₂S Removal (Desulfurization)

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  • Hâ‚‚S is corrosive and toxic
  • Methods:
    • Iron oxide (iron sponge)
    • Activated carbon
    • Biological scrubbers

 Step 3: CO₂ Removal (Upgrading)

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This is the most critical step.

Common technologies:

Method Working Principle Suitability
Water Scrubbing CO₂ dissolves in water Small–medium plants
PSA (Pressure Swing Adsorption) COâ‚‚ adsorbed on media Medium plants
Membrane Separation Selective gas separation Modern plants
Amine Scrubbing Chemical absorption Large plants

Output: Biomethane (~95% CHâ‚„)

 Step 4: Moisture Removal (Drying)

  • Methods:
    • Chilling + condensation
    • Silica gel dryers

Required to avoid pipeline corrosion & freezing

 Step 5: Compression

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  • Compress gas to 200–250 bar
  • Equipment:
    • Multi-stage compressor
    • Cascade cylinders

Final product = Bio-CNG

 3. Basic Process Flow Diagram

Biogas Plant → H₂S Removal → CO₂ Removal → Dryer → Compressor → Storage (CNG cylinders)

 4. Key Equipment Required

  • Digester (biogas plant)
  • Gas scrubber (Hâ‚‚S removal)
  • COâ‚‚ removal unit (PSA / water scrubber)
  • Gas dryer
  • High-pressure compressor
  • Storage cylinders (cascade system)

🔷 5. Typical Output & Efficiency

Parameter Value
Methane purity 90–98%
Energy content ~50 MJ/kg
Conversion efficiency 85–95%
Compression pressure 200–250 bar

 6. Applications of Bio-CNG

  • Vehicle fuel (cars, buses, tractors)
  • PNG replacement
  • Industrial burners (you may find this relevant given your burner interest)
  • Power generation

 7. Indian Context (Important)

  • Government scheme: SATAT (Sustainable Alternative Towards Affordable Transportation)
  • Oil companies buy Bio-CNG
  • High demand for:
    • Dairy waste plants
    • Municipal waste plants

 8. Practical Challenges

  • High initial cost of upgrading plant
  • COâ‚‚ removal efficiency
  • Compressor maintenance
  • Feedstock consistency

 9. Small vs Large Plant Insight

Plant Type Capacity Technology
Small (farm level) 10–100 m³/day Water scrubber
Medium 100–1000 m³/day PSA
Large (commercial) >1000 m³/day Membrane / Amine

 10. Simple Insight (Engineering View)

👉 Raw biogas is low-grade fuel
👉 Bio-CNG is pipeline/vehicle-grade fuel

The entire process is about:

  • Removing COâ‚‚ (increase calorific value)
  • Removing impurities (protect equipment)
  • Compressing gas (store & transport)

If you want, I can go deeper into:

  • Design of biogas upgrading system (PSA/membrane)
  • Cost estimation for India (small/medium plant)
  • CFD scope in gas cleaning and burner design using Bio-CNG
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