| Place of Origin: | China |
| Brand Name: | CEC TANKS |
| Certification: | ISO 9001:2008, AWWA D103 , OSHA , BSCI |
| Model Number: | W |
| Minimum Order Quantity: | 1set |
| Price: | $5000~$20000 one set |
| Packaging Details: | PE poly-foam between each two steel plates ; wooden pallet and wooden |
| Delivery Time: | 10-30 days after deposit received |
| Payment Terms: | L/C, T/T |
| Supply Ability: | 60 sets per month |
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Detail Information |
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| Place of Origin | China | Brand Name | CEC TANKS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Certification | ISO 9001:2008, AWWA D103 , OSHA , BSCI | Model Number | W |
| Tank Body Color: | Dark Green / Can Be Customized | Corrosion Integrity: | Excellent |
| Steel Plates Thickness: | 3mm To 12mm , Depends On The Tank Structure | Chemical Resistance: | Excellent |
| Size Of Panel: | 2.4M * 1.2M | Easy To Clean: | Smooth, Glossy, Inert, Anti-adhesion |
| Highlight: | biogas power solutions for Australia,dry straw biogas project,CSTR process wastewater treatment |
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Rapid economic transition, agricultural development, and shifting energy requirements have fundamentally altered the landscape of biomass utilization across global economies. Among the various streams of agricultural residues, crop waste—specifically dry straw—presents a valuable resource for decentralized utility management. Dry straw, consisting of stalks, husks, and residual organic matter from grain harvesting, represents a massive portion of the seasonal refuse generated in rural zones and farming regions. In rapidly evolving nations like Australia, managing this agricultural by-product effectively requires advanced waste-to-energy frameworks that can transform a potential environmental burden into a reliable source of green energy.
Australia possesses a highly productive agricultural sector, generating immense volumes of dry straw annually from vital domestic grain cultivation, particularly wheat, barley, and oat harvesting across major agricultural belts. Historically, a significant percentage of this tough, lignocellulosic material has been discarded, left to accumulate in fields, or burned in open areas. Under varying seasonal weather patterns, field burning releases extensive particulate matter and compromises local air quality, while unmanaged stockpiles undergo slow, uncontrolled natural degradation. When channeled through engineered waste-to-energy infrastructures, Australia’s substantial dry straw reserves provide an excellent, high-yield substrate for localized biogas power production and renewable electricity generation.
Converting heterogeneous, high-solid dry straw into a reliable energy source relies on advanced anaerobic technologies via anaerobic digestion. Inside an engineered, oxygen-free reactor environment, specialized microbial communities break down complex organic materials through four distinct biological phases:
Hydrolysis: Complex organic polymers and fibrous structures (cellulose, hemicellulose, and proteins) within the dry straw are broken down by extracellular enzymes into soluble monomers like simple sugars and amino acids.
Acidogenesis: Acid-forming bacteria quickly ferment these soluble monomers, converting them into volatile fatty acids (VFAs), alcohols, and lactic acids.
Acetogenesis: Acetogenic microorganisms further catabolize the accumulated VFAs and alcohols, synthesizing them into acetic acid, carbon dioxide ($CO_2$), and hydrogen gas ($H_2$).
Methanogenesis: In the final stage, highly sensitive methanogenic archaea consume the acetic acid and hydrogen to generate biogas—a renewable fuel composed primarily of methane ($CH_4$) and carbon dioxide ($CO_2$). Once captured, this biogas can be upgraded into vehicle fuel, used for localized thermal heating, or converted into green electricity to supply the local power grid.
Implementing a dedicated dry straw biogas project delivers multifaceted ecological and socioeconomic rewards aligned with Australia's sustainable development and circular economy frameworks:
Decentralized Renewable Power: Transforming rural crop waste into electricity or cooking gas provides local communities with clean energy, reinforcing regional grid stability and supporting national green energy diversity targets.
Mitigation of Field Burning: Capturing agricultural biomass for controlled energy recovery prevents harmful fugitive emissions and severe seasonal air pollution caused by open-field straw burning.
Organic Fertilizer Production: The nutrient-dense digestate remaining after the anaerobic process serves as a premium organic fertilizer, offering agricultural communities a cost-effective alternative to expensive chemical inputs.
Selecting the appropriate reactor configuration is essential when dealing with the variable, high-solid characteristics of dry agricultural biomass. Center Enamel provides specialized engineering expertise across four primary anaerobic processes:
CSTR (Continuous Stirred Tank Reactor Process): The premier choice for high-solid organic substrates, including chopped dry straw and thick co-digestion slurries. Its active mechanical agitation system ensures a completely homogeneous environment, preventing surface crusting and maximizing biogas yields from fibrous inputs.
UASB (Upflow Anaerobic Sludge Blanket): A high-rate process designed for liquid-phase wastewater. Liquid flows upward through a dense, self-granulating anaerobic sludge blanket, achieving exceptional chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal within a highly compact footprint.
USR (Upflow Solids Reactor): Specifically engineered for waste streams with elevated suspended solids (SS). By lengthening the retention time of solid particles within the digestion zone, it ensures comprehensive biological conversion of stubborn particulate matter.
IC (Internal Circulation) Reactor: An ultra-high-rate, next-generation system utilizing a dual-stage internal circulation loop propelled by self-generated biogas, optimized to handle extreme organic loading rates with superior efficiency.
The operational longevity of a dry straw biogas power project depends heavily on the resilience of its containment systems. Center Enamel’s proprietary GFS Tanks (Glass-Fused-to-Steel) deliver premier structural and chemical performance tailored for diverse municipal and rural environments:
Superior Corrosion Resistance: Dry biomass digestion creates an aggressive biochemical environment rich in organic acids and corrosive hydrogen sulfide ($H_2S$) gas. The inert glass coating molecularly fused to the steel plates creates an impermeable shield that completely resists chemical degradation.
High Environmental Resilience: Australia’s varied climate requires equipment that resists both intense heat and coastal corrosion. The modular, bolted construction of GFS Tanks offers engineered structural elasticity, delivering far greater impact and weather resistance than rigid, crack-prone concrete structures.
Rapid, Localized Construction: Completely prefabricated off-site, GFS Tanks are shipped modularly and assembled quickly using a top-down jacking mechanism, eliminating extended concrete pouring times and minimizing labor requirements in remote agricultural areas.
Expandable Footprint: Bolted steel tank configurations optimize vertical storage, minimizing the physical land footprint required while allowing facilities to scale up capacity easily as incoming straw volumes expand.
Collaborating with Center Enamel as an experienced turnkey EPC partner ensures outstanding technical execution and long-term project viability:
End-to-End Turnkey Delivery: Center Enamel manages the entire project lifecycle, providing custom process engineering, state-of-the-art manufacturing, automated PLC controls integration, rapid on-site assembly, and commissioning.
Tailored Substrate Engineering: Because agricultural residue composition varies, our engineering team optimizes the internal digestion and mixing configuration to match regional biomass characteristics and climate conditions.
Comprehensive Systems Integration: Beyond manufacturing industry-leading GFS Tanks, we seamlessly integrate crucial auxiliary technologies, including advanced double-membrane gas holders, specialized mixers, and multi-stage biogas purification systems.
Extensive Global Experience: With successful waste-to-energy installations deployed across more than 100 countries, Center Enamel adapts proven international innovations to satisfy local regulatory standards and unique operating environments.
Center Enamel’s engineering excellence is demonstrated across a diverse portfolio of international large-scale biogas installations:
Case1: Indonesia Biogas Project
Application: Anaerobic Reactors for Palm Oil Mill Effluent (POME) Treatment Plant
Tank Models: Ø17.58 × 8.4 m, Ø16.82 × 7.2 m
Number of Tanks: 3 GFS Tanks
Installation Date: 2013
Case2: Turkey Food Waste Treatment Project
Process: CSTR
Tank Dimensions: φ16.81 × 16.8 m (H) — 2 Units
Total Volume: 7,452 m³
Completion Date: 2020
Developing resilient, sustainable waste-to-energy infrastructure is an essential step as agricultural and energy sectors drive towards a low-carbon, circular economy. Deploying specialized anaerobic solutions powered by the advanced CSTR process and premium GFS Tanks provides municipalities and agricultural cooperatives with an efficient, highly durable pathway to manage the growing challenges of organic waste. By entering into a strategic partnership with Center Enamel, project stakeholders secure direct access to world-class engineering, field-proven technologies, and highly resilient containment systems.