VITORINO, K. M. N.; VITORINO, Kelma Maria Nobre.
Abstract:
The Sugar and Alcohol Plants are characterized by
production of a large amount of organic waste,
Sugarcane bagasse, filter cake and vinhoto, which due to their
polluting characteristics must not be released into the environment
without first undergoing a treatment process (Rameh,
1080; Bichara and Pizysieznig, 1991D.
Believing that the treatment and recycling of these
waste with the production of an organic fertilizer to be
used in the cultivation of sugar cane, whether the solution
best way to eliminate the environmental impacts caused by
these industries, is that the present work had as main
objective to define a co-composting methodology for these
waste.
In this research the method of composting by
overturning also known as Windrow process.
During the research, the need for inoculum was studied
(bovine manure) and the percentage composition of mixture
waste that would provide better conditions for
compostability. Windrows were set up with the waste from power plants
of sugar; with waste from Autonomous Distilleries; and windrows with
waste from sugar mills with an attached distillery. The windrows
were built on a pilot scale (1 to 3 tons) and on a
actual workload (17.5 tonnes).
The monitoring of the process was carried out through
physical analysis (density and temperature); physical - chemical (content
in . humidity and ph); chemicals (compostable organic carbon,
total nitrogen, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, phosphorus,
iron, zinc, copper and manganese); bacteriological (determination of
fecal streptococci), in addition to daily observations, such as: color,
odor and attraction of vectors.
At the end of an average composting period of 160 days,
time considered excellent when it comes to cellulolytic materials
(cane bagasse), an organic compound with a high
degree of stabilization and humification, presenting C / N ratio
average of 10: 1 for the inoculated material of Waste from
Sugar and 15: 1 to 6 inoculated material from Distilleries
Autonomous and an average C / N ratio of 13: 1 for the
inoculated with Sugar Mill Waste with Attached Distillery.
The methodology now proposed is characterized by presenting
low cost and high operational flexibility, which can be
applied in any work scale.