Inhibition of hydrogen production by endogenous microorganisms from food waste
Food waste can be used as substrate in the dark fermentation to produce value-added products such as hydrogen, a future renewable energy supply. However, biological reactor unstable conditions might affect its potential use as green energy by low production rates. This study examined the instability...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Brazilian journal of chemical engineering 2023-03, Vol.40 (1), p.137-150 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Food waste can be used as substrate in the dark fermentation to produce value-added products such as hydrogen, a future renewable energy supply. However, biological reactor unstable conditions might affect its potential use as green energy by low production rates. This study examined the instability of hydrogen production by dark fermentation of food waste in an anaerobic sequential biological reactor through a microbial community analysis. Hydrogen production varied significantly with a maximum of 25.74 mL H
2
/g VS
added
to low production as 1.29–3.18 mL H
2
/g VS
added
until the end of the experiment. Microbial community analysis showed that the unstable stage was related to the displacement of hydrogen-producing bacteria as
Clostridium
,
Prevotella
,
Caloramator
, and
Bacteroides
by a predominant abundance of
Bifidobacterium
, a lactic-acid bacteria. Furthermore, microbial analysis of food waste revealed the endogenous abundance of lactic-acid bacteria as
Latilactobacillus
(43.73%),
Leuconostoc
(12.1%),
Lactiplantibacillus
(1.84%),
Lactococcus
(1.37%),
Lactobacillus
(0.43%),
Streptococcus
(0.39%) and
Bifidobacterium
(0.19%). Thus, the inhibition of hydrogen production could be caused by the incoming of
Bifidobacterium
from food waste, which could compete for the substrate changing the acetic/butyric fermentation to a possible lactic acid fermentation. |
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ISSN: | 0104-6632 1678-4383 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s43153-022-00235-5 |