98 Organic waste recycling: technology and management
Table 3.1 C/N ratio of various wastes
Materials Nitrogen
(percent of dry weight)
C/N ratio
Nightsoil 5.5 - 6.5 6 to 10
Urine 15 - 18 0.8
Blood 10 to 14 3
Animal tankage - 3
Cow manure 1.7 18
Poultry manure 6.3 15
Sheep manure 3.8 -
Pig manure 3.8 -
Horse manure 2.3 25
Raw sewage sludge 4 to 7 11
Digested sewage sludge 2 to 4
Activated sludge 5 6
Grass clippings 3 to 6 12 to 15
Nonlegume vegetable waste 2.5 to 4 11 to 12
Mixed grasses 2.4 19
Potato tops 1.5 25
Straw, wheat 0.3 to 0.5 128 to 150
Straw, oats 1.1 48
Saw dust 0.1 200 to 500
From Golueke (1972); reproduced by permission of the JG Press
- Some of the C substrate such as cellulose and lignin are highly resistant to
biological break-down, and are only decomposed over a long period of
time. - Some of the nutrients such as keratin-type proteins are in the accessibly
difficult form and is not easily available during much of the composing
process. - Some nitrogen fixation can take place through the bacteria Azotobacter
sp. especially in the presence of adequate phosphatic material. - Analysis of C concentration may be difficult and the following
relationship providing an accuracy of within 2-10% is proposed (Gotaas
1956):
100 - % ash
% C = (3.6)
1.8