Source-based rewritten biogas storage tank and gas holder system at a renewable energy plant
Biogas storage systems should define gas volume, pressure range, H2S exposure, membrane/cover interface, and safety accessories.

Biogas Storage Tanks and Gas Holder Systems

Biogas storage is normally part of a complete anaerobic digestion or renewable energy system. Buyers should define whether the requirement is a digester tank, slurry storage tank, double membrane gas holder, separate biogas balloon, or tank with an integrated roof system.

The page should not copy a source manufacturer claim. It should help buyers confirm process gas volume, operating pressure range, H2S exposure, condensate control, safety valve requirements, membrane material, anchoring, and connection with anaerobic digester tanks.

Biogas Storage RFQ Data

Review ItemRecommended Buyer Input
Gas dutyBiogas volume, working pressure range, methane content, H2S concentration if known, condensate risk, and process operating mode.
Storage typeDouble membrane gas holder, integrated tank cover, external gas balloon, slurry tank, or digester package.
Tank interfaceNozzles, gas pipe, condensate drain, pressure/vacuum protection, flame arrester if specified, and safety/access requirements.
Site dataProject country, wind load, temperature range, installation method, maintenance access, and commissioning responsibility.

Product Page vs Application Page

The product page should explain gas holder and tank selection. The application page explains the biogas process context. Keep these pages connected but not duplicated.

For project duty, review biogas and anaerobic digestion. For roof selection, compare double membrane roofs and other cover options.

Next RFQ Steps

Send gas volume, pressure range, process function, H2S/temperature data, membrane or tank preference, site loads, safety accessories, and installation support needs.