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Home Solar & Renewable Energy

Biogas Generator for Home India: How to Build and Use It

Biogas Generator for Home India: How to Build and Use It

March 11, 2026 /Posted byJayesh Jain / 0

A biogas generator for home use in India is one of the most practical renewable energy solutions for rural households, farms, and even urban homes with access to organic waste. By converting kitchen scraps, cow dung, and agricultural residue into combustible methane gas, a DIY biogas plant can provide free cooking fuel and reduce LPG dependence significantly. This guide covers the complete process from digester construction to gas usage.

Table of Contents

  • How Biogas Generation Works
  • Types of Biogas Digesters
  • Sizing Your Home Biogas Plant
  • Step-by-Step Construction Guide
  • Feedstock Options for Indian Homes
  • Using Biogas to Generate Electricity
  • Safety Precautions
  • Frequently Asked Questions

How Biogas Generation Works

Biogas is produced by anaerobic digestion — microorganisms breaking down organic matter in the absence of oxygen. The process occurs in four stages: hydrolysis, acidogenesis, acetogenesis, and methanogenesis. The final product is biogas (55–70% methane, 30–45% CO₂) and digestate (a nutrient-rich slurry for use as fertiliser).

Temperature significantly affects biogas production. Mesophilic digestion (25–40°C) works well in most Indian climates without heating. In North India winters (below 15°C), production drops sharply — insulating the digester with rice husk or thermocol helps maintain output year-round.

Types of Biogas Digesters

Fixed Dome (Deenbandhu Model)

The most popular design in India, developed by AFPRO. An underground brick-and-cement dome with no moving parts. Gas pressure builds as it fills. Low maintenance cost. Suitable for 1–6 cubic metre capacity. Used widely under MNRE’s National Biogas Programme.

Floating Drum (KVIC Model)

A cylindrical digester with an inverted steel drum that floats on the slurry, collecting gas. Provides constant pressure. The drum requires painting every 2–3 years to prevent rust. More expensive than fixed dome but easier to monitor gas volume.

Portable Plug-Flow Digester

Balloon-type PVC or rubber digester. Low cost, easy to set up, suitable for 1–3 persons. Popular for urban use in flats or small homes. Commercially available from companies like HomeBiogas (₹25,000–₹40,000) and Indian startups like Biotech India.

Recommended: Waveshare Solar Power Manager Module (D) — Combine your biogas system with solar charging to power the monitoring electronics and sensors around your biogas plant.

Sizing Your Home Biogas Plant

The required digester volume depends on daily organic waste input and desired hydraulic retention time (HRT). For cow dung (most common Indian feedstock):

Daily gas production = 0.04 m³ per kg of fresh cow dung
Digester volume (m³) = Daily input (kg) × HRT (days)

Example:
  2 cows produce ~25 kg dung/day
  HRT for mesophilic = 40 days
  Digester volume = 25 × 40 / 1000 = 1 m³ (liquid volume)
  Add 30% for gas space = 1.3 m³

Standard plant sizes in India:
  1 m³  → 1-3 persons, ~2 kg dung/day
  2 m³  → family of 4-6, ~25 kg dung/day (2 cows)
  4 m³  → 10+ persons or mixed farm waste

MNRE offers subsidy for 1–6 m³ Deenbandhu model plants: ₹10,000–₹16,000 depending on state. Apply through your district agricultural office or state nodal agency.

Step-by-Step Construction Guide

Materials for a 2 m³ Deenbandhu Digester

  • Cement: 12 bags (50 kg each)
  • River sand: 1.5 cubic metres
  • Bricks: 500 pieces
  • MS pipe (inlet/outlet): 6 metres of 150mm dia GI pipe
  • PVC gas pipe: 15 metres of 20mm dia
  • Gas valve and pressure gauge: 1 set

Construction Steps

  1. Excavate a sphere-shaped pit. For 2 m³: diameter ≈ 2.4 m, depth 1.6 m below grade
  2. Cast a concrete base slab (100mm thick, 1:2:4 mix)
  3. Build brick walls in a dome shape using thin-shell construction
  4. Plaster inner surface with waterproof cement mortar (2 coats)
  5. Install inlet pipe at 45° angle; outlet pipe on opposite side
  6. Cast concrete outlet chamber (displacement chamber)
  7. Cure for 21 days minimum before commissioning
  8. Commission with slurry: 50% cow dung + 50% water by volume

Feedstock Options for Indian Homes

Almost any organic waste can be used, but C:N ratio matters. Ideal range: 20:1 to 30:1.

  • Cow dung: C:N ≈ 18:1. Best single feedstock. Mix 1:1 with water.
  • Kitchen waste: C:N ≈ 15:1. Works well but avoid oily food, citrus peels, and onions in large quantities.
  • Poultry manure: C:N ≈ 8:1. Mix with carbon-rich material like dry leaves.
  • Crop residue (rice straw): C:N ≈ 70:1. Mix with nitrogen-rich material and pre-soak for 5–7 days.
  • Human faecal matter: Can be used (toilet-linked biogas). Requires careful hygiene management. Government promotes toilet-linked biogas in some states.
Recommended: Arduino UNO R3 Development Board — Monitor digester temperature, pH, and gas pressure with an Arduino-based sensor system for optimal biogas yield.

Using Biogas to Generate Electricity

Beyond cooking, biogas can power a modified petrol generator to produce electricity — this is called a biogas generator. Conversion involves:

  1. Gas purification: Remove H₂S using an iron filings scrubber (prevents engine corrosion) and CO₂ using water scrubbing (increases methane concentration)
  2. Engine modification: Reduce compression ratio to 10:1 or below; fit a gas-air mixer at carburettor inlet
  3. Dual-fuel operation: Run on 80% biogas + 20% diesel (compression ignition engines) — no carburettor modification needed
# Biogas electricity output estimation
# 1 m³ biogas ≈ 1.5 kWh electricity (generator efficiency ~25-30%)
# 2 m³ plant produces ≈ 1-2 m³ biogas/day
# Electricity output ≈ 1.5-3 kWh/day
# Sufficient for: 5 LED bulbs + 1 fan for 8 hours
Recommended: ESP8266 WiFi Relay Module — Automate generator start/stop and gas valve control remotely via WiFi from your biogas generator setup.

Safety Precautions

  • Never smoke or use open flame near the gas outlet or storage balloon
  • Install a gas pressure gauge; do not allow pressure above 10 cm water column for kitchen use
  • Check all pipe joints with soap water solution weekly — bubbles indicate leaks
  • Build a flame trap (water seal) in the gas line before any appliance
  • Biogas is explosive between 5–15% concentration in air — ensure ventilation in enclosed spaces
  • Digestate is mildly alkaline — wear gloves when handling the outlet slurry

Frequently Asked Questions

How long before a new biogas plant starts producing gas?

A new digester takes 30–60 days to establish the microbial colony. Initial gas (mostly CO₂) should be vented. From day 40–60, methane percentage rises and you can start using the gas for cooking.

Can I use a biogas plant in an urban flat?

Yes! Portable balloon-type digesters (50–200 litres) are available commercially for ₹8,000–₹25,000 and can be placed on a balcony or terrace. They process 500g–2kg of kitchen waste daily.

What is the government subsidy for biogas plants in India?

Under the National Biogas Programme (NBMMP), MNRE provides ₹10,000–₹16,000 subsidy for family-size plants (1–6 m³). Some states like Maharashtra and UP provide additional top-up subsidies of ₹5,000–₹8,000.

Will the biogas plant smell bad?

A properly sealed and functioning digester should not smell. The characteristic rotten-egg odour is hydrogen sulphide (H₂S) — if you detect it, check for seal leaks or add an H₂S scrubber in the gas line.

Can biogas replace LPG completely?

A 4 m³ plant fed with waste from 4–6 cattle can produce enough biogas (2–3 m³/day) to replace one LPG cylinder per month, saving ₹800–₹1,000/month.

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Tags: biogas digester, biogas generator india, diy biogas plant, kitchen waste energy, renewable energy home
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