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Organic Amendments For Enhancing Microbial Coalbed Methane Productio

Posted on:2018-12-22Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Montana State UniversityCandidate:Davis, Katherine JeanFull Text:PDF
GTID:1471390020957656Subject:Environmental Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
Coalbed methane (CBM) is natural gas found in subsurface coal beds and supplies approximately 4-6% of the annual U.S. natural gas requirements. Many unmineable coal beds contain CBM produced by native microbial communities. Enhancing the microbial processes for coal-to-methane conversion can increase the rates of CBM production and the amount of extractable natural gas in these coal beds. Strategies for enhancing microbially-produced CBM must be logistically attainable and economically practical. The goal of this dissertation work was to determine a feasible methane enhancement strategy using organic amendments to increase microbial coal-to-methane conversion.;Four organic amendments were tested in coal-containing batch microcosms. Increased coal-to-methane conversion was demonstrated with small amounts of amendment addition, and all four tested amendments increased methane production similarly. Subsequent amendment addition produced smaller amounts of additional methane which appeared to be primarily due to amendment-to-methane conversion. 13C- labeled algal and yeast amendments were used in coal systems for tracking carbon for methane production. It was shown that <22% of the amendment carbon was converted to methane. By tracking amendment carbon, it became clear that carbon sources besides coal and amendment are utilized for methane production; these carbon sources potentially include organic and inorganic carbon in the formation water and inoculum.;Amendment strategies tested in batch systems were scaled up and applied to column reactors. Methane production from coal increased with small amounts of 13C- labeled algal amendment addition. However, unlike in batch experiments, methane production rates in the column flow reactors did not slow or cease after 60-90 days, and methane was still being produced after 176 days when the study was terminated.;The work presented here demonstrates that organic amendment addition is a viable methane enhancement strategy and all tested amendments were similarly effective. Algae can potentially be grown in CBM production water ponds near the amendment site and may thus offset costs associated with a CBM enhancement strategy based on the potential for producing value-added algal byproducts. These studies solidify the foundation for further studies targeting the scale-up of microbially enhanced CBM production in the field.
Keywords/Search Tags:Methane, CBM, Coal, Amendment, Microbial, Natural gas, Enhancing
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