Fixed dome biogas plants are designed to meet higher demands of gas at higher pressure with greater efficiency.
This is one of our recent installation of a fixed some Bio Gas Digester in Bangalore.
Set in a quiet Ashrama, home to 40 residential students, this system isn’t just an energy solution — it’s a living, breathing model of circularity.
The system includes:
1. A Mixer Unit, where kitchen waste and cowdung begins its quiet transformation.
2. A Feeder Tank, guiding the slurry into the core.
3. An Anaerobic Digester, where in the absence of oxygen, microbes work their silent magic — producing methane-rich biogas.
4. A Slurry and Overflow Tank, collecting the nutrient-dense by-product — soon to nourish the soil as organic fertilizer.
5. A Gas Scrubber, refining the biogas, removing impurities and preparing it for clean combustion.
The journey from waste to flame is almost poetic.
Every day, the cleaned biogas flows silently to the Ashrama’s kitchen, fueling two humble burners. Together, they cook two hot, wholesome meals a day — enough to nourish all 40 young minds.
This installation is more than just a digester.
It’s a symbol of harmony — between nature and need, between waste and worth.
Such decentralized models remind us that the future of clean energy may not lie in complexity, but in clarity of intention and simplicity of design.