Build Your Own
Biogas Generator
Teach...build...learn...renewable energy!
Page 1 of 5
Basic Principles
What Is Biogas?
Biogas is actually a mixture of gases, usually carbon
dioxide and methane. It is produced by a few kinds
of microorganisms, usually when air or oxygen is
absent. (The absence of oxygen is called “anaerobic
conditions.”) Animals that eat a lot of plant material,
particularly grazing animals such as cattle, produce
large amounts of biogas. The biogas is produced not
by the cow or elephant, but by billions of microorganisms living in its digestive system. Biogas also
develops in bogs and at the bottom of lakes, where
decaying organic matter builds up under wet and
anaerobic conditions.
Plant-eating animals such as bison release large amounts
of biogas to the atmosphere.
Biogas is a Form of Renewable Energy
Flammable biogas can be collected using a simple
tank, as shown here. Animal manure is stored in a
closed tank where the gas accumulates. It makes an
excellent fuel for cook stoves and furnaces, and can
be used in place of regular natural gas, which is a
fossil fuel.
A microscope photo of the methane-producing bacteria.
Photo courtesy of University of Florida,
Agricultural and Biological Engineering Department
Besides being able to live without oxygen, methaneproducing microorganisms have another special feature: They are among the very few creatures that can
digest cellulose, the main ingredient of plant fibres.
Another special feature of these organisms is that
they are very sensitive to conditions in their environment, such as temperature, acidity, the amount of
water, etc.
Biogas is a form of renewable energy, because it is
produced with the help of growing plants.
Biogas is considered to be a source of renewable
energy. This is because the production of biogas
depends on the supply of grass, which usually grows
back each year. By comparison, the natural gas used
in most of our homes is not considered a form of
renewable energy. Natural gas formed from the fos
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Another internet tool by: The Pembina Institute
Build Your Own
Biogas Generator
silized remains of plants and animals-a process that
took millions of years. These resources do not “grow
back” in a time scale that is meaningful for humans.
Biogas is Not New
People have been using biogas for over 200 years.
In the days before electricity, biogas was drawn from
the underground sewer pipes in London and burned
in street lamps, which were known as “gaslights.” In
many parts of the world, biogas is used to heat and
light homes, to cook, and even to fuel buses. It is collected from large-scale sources such as landfills and
pig barns, and through small domestic or community
systems in many villages.
For more information about biogas, read the
backgrounder entitled Biomass Energy.
Build It!
The apparatus you are going to build uses a discarded
18 litre water container as the “digester.” A mixture
of water and animal manure will generate the
methane, which you will collect in a plastic balloon.
The 18 litre water container performs the same task
as the stomach of a livestock animal by providing
the warm, wet conditions favored by the bacteria that
make the methane.
Teach...build...learn...renewable energy!
Page 2 of 5
Tools
• Tubing cutter
• Scissors
• Adjustable wrench
• Rubber gloves
• Electric drill with ¼” bit, or cork borer
• Hot glue gun, with glue sticks
• Electrical or duct tape
• Sandpaper (metal file will also work)
Materials
• Used 18L clear plastic water bottle
• Large Mylar helium balloon
Plastic water bottle cap (with the “no-spill”
insert-see photo)
• Copper tubing (40 cm long, 6.5mm (1/4”)
inside diameter)
• T-connector for plastic tubing (barbed, 6mm or
¼” long)
• 1 cork (tapered, 23mm long)
• Clear vinyl tubing (1.5 m long, 4mm or ¼-inch
inside diameter)
• 2 barb fittings (¼” x ¼”)
• Ball valve (1/4”)
• 6-8L manure pellets (goat, sheep, llama, rabbit,
or other ruminant)
• Rubber gloves
• Large plastic funnel (can be made from a 4L
plastic milk jug with bottom removed)
• Wooden dowelling or stick (30 to 50 cm long,
2-3 cm thick)
Safety Precautions
The main hazards in this activity are from sharp
tools such as tubing cutters and scissors. Exercise
caution while using any tool. There is no risk of
explosion due to the leakage of methane because the
gas develops so slowly that it dissipates long before
it can reach flammable concentrations in room air.
Exercise the normal precautions in the use of Bunsen
burners: keep hair and clothing away from the burner
while it is lit.
A Renewable Energy Project Kit
The materials and tools you’ll need to build a
biogas generator.
Another internet tool by: The Pembina Institute
Build Your Own
Biogas Generator
Sources
Water bottle: Many hardware and grocery stores
now sell purified water that they bottle on site.
They often collect containers that can no longer be
refilled because of dirt or damage to the bottle. These
unrefillable bottles are frequently available for free.
Ask to speak to the clerk in charge of refilling bottles.
Ask for a used cap as well.
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Page 3 of 5
3. Test the tube to be sure air can enter and leave the
balloon freely, by blowing a little in through the tube.
The balloon should inflate with little or no resistance,
and the air should be able to escape easily through
the tube.
4. Securely tape the neck of the balloon to the tube
as shown in the illustration.
Mylar balloons: Check with any local florist or novelty store.
Tubing, valves, T-connectors, barb fittings: Check at
your local hardware or plumbing supply store.
Manure: If you do not know someone who has
domesticated rabbits, sheep, llamas or other similar
pellet-producing animals, you can often purchase
sheep or steer manure by the bag at your local garden
center.
A. Prepare the biogas collection system
1. Cut a 20cm piece of copper tubing. Round off the
sharp edges of the freshly cut tubing using sandpaper
or a metal file.
2. The Mylar balloon has a sleeve-like valve that
prevents helium from escaping once it is filled. This
sleeve will help form a leak-proof seal around the
rigid tubing. Push the tubing into the neck of the
balloon, past the end of the sleeve, leaving about 2cm
protruding from the neck of the balloon, as shown
below.
Inserting copper tubing.
Taping the neck.
5. Using a drill or cork borer, make a small (4mm)
hole in the center of the stopper. Add a few drops
of hot glue around and inside the hole and insert the
stem of the ¼-inch T-adapter into the cork.
Gluing cork.
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Another internet tool by: The Pembina Institute
Build Your Own
Biogas Generator
6. Screw the two barb fittings into the body of the
ball valve. Tighten with the adjustable wrench.
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Page 4 of 5
B. Prepare the manure mixture
This is a job best done outside, with rubber gloves!
1. Cut the bottom off a 4L plastic milk jug to make a
wide-mouthed funnel.
2. Place the funnel into the neck of the plastic water
bottle and scoop in small amounts of manure.
Installing the barb fittings on the ball valve.
7. Cut two sections of vinyl tubing, each 25cm long.
Use them to connect the balloon to the T-adapter,
and to connect the ball valve to the Bunsen burner.
Assemble the rest of the gas collection system
according to the diagram below.
Scooping manure.
3. Use a stick or piece of dowelling to push the
manure through the neck of the bottle if it gets
plugged.
4. Add enough water to bring the level close to the
top of the water bottle.
Assembly of the biogas collection system.
Slurry level.
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Another internet tool by: The Pembina Institute
Build Your Own
Biogas Generator
Teach...build...learn...renewable energy!
Page 5 of 5
5. Use the stick to stir up the manure and water
mixture, releasing any bubbles of air that might be
trapped.
6. Clean up carefully. Use soap and wash hands
thoroughly.
C. Final Set-up
1. Snap the cap onto the top of the manure-filled 18
litre water bottle.
2. Be sure the
ball valve is
closed, but that
gas moving from
the water bottle
can pass freely
through the
T-adapter to the
balloon.
Use caution when testing the biogas.
1. First, open the clamp or valve so that biogas can
flow back from the balloon to the Bunsen burner.
2. Have a friend squeeze the Mylar balloon gently
while you attempt to light the Bunsen burner with
a match or spark igniter.
3. If your Bunsen burner ignites, your biogas
generator is a success!
3. Set the biogas
generator in a
warm location,
such as over a
heat register or
Completed biogas generator.
radiator or in a
sunlit window. If
the biogas generator is placed in a window, be sure to
wrap the outside of the container in black plastic or
construction paper, to discourage algae from growing
inside the bottle.
Questions
1. Why is biogas considered a source of
renewable energy?
Test It!
3. What are some of the practical limitations
to using biogas as an energy source on a
large scale?
For the first few weeks, your biogas generator will
produce mainly carbon dioxide. When the aerobic
bacteria use up all the oxygen inside the bottle, the
anaerobic bacteria, which make methane, can take
over. It can take up to a month for the generator
to start making biogas with enough methane to be
flammable.
When gas begins to accumulate in the balloon, test it
by attempting to light the Bunsen burner:
2. In what appliances or to what uses could
biogas be applied?
4. Where in Canada would biogas be a viable
alternative to fossil fuels?
5. Why do you not want photosynthetic algae
(see Part C, # 3) growing in your “digester”?
Contact us at: education@pembina.org
A Renewable Energy Project Kit
Another internet tool by: The Pembina Institute