Adaptation to salinity: Response of biogas production and microbial communities in anaerobic digestion of kitchen waste to salinity stress

2020 ◽  
Vol 130 (2) ◽  
pp. 173-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing Zhang ◽  
Rongtang Zhang ◽  
Qiulai He ◽  
Bin Ji ◽  
Hongyu Wang ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 64 (No. 3) ◽  
pp. 128-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Radmard Seyed Abbas ◽  
Alizadeh Hossein Haji Agha ◽  
Seifi Rahman

The effects of thermal (autoclave and microwave irradiation (MW)) and thermo-chemical (autoclave and microwave irradiation – assisted NaOH 5N) pretreatments on the chemical oxygen demand (COD) solubilisation, biogas and methane production of anaerobic digestion kitchen waste (KW) were investigated in this study. The modified Gompertz equation was fitted to accurately assess and compare the biogas and methane production from KW under the different pretreatment conditions and to attain representative simulations and predictions. In present study, COD solubilisation was demonstrated as an effective effect of pretreatment. Thermo-chemical pretreatments could improve biogas and methane production yields from KW. A comprehensive evaluation indicated that the thermo-chemical pretreatments (microwave irradiation and autoclave- assisted NaOH 5N, respectively) provided the best conditions to increase biogas and methane production from KW. The most effective enhancement of biogas and methane production (68.37 and 36.92 l, respectively) was observed from MW pretreated KW along with NaOH 5N, with the shortest lag phase of 1.79  day, the max. rate of 2.38 l·day<sup>–1</sup> and ultimate biogas production of 69.8 l as the modified Gompertz equation predicted.


2014 ◽  
Vol 955-959 ◽  
pp. 2692-2696 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Fan Liu ◽  
Yong Wei Liao ◽  
Jie Liang ◽  
Shu Ting Lai

The characteristics such as pH, dry matter, carbon concentration, the total solid and volatile solid of kitchen wastes produced by a canteen in Guangzhou were measured. The anaerobic digestion process performances were evaluated through the examination of operational conditions like activated sludge inoculation, temperature on SS, biogas production, COD concentration and pH in the reactor. When the proportion between kitchen wastes to seed sludge inoculation was 1:1, the biogas production reached the peak at 45 °C. The kitchen waste pH decreased at the first four days then increased adversely after 4 days digestion, but COD concentration showed the opposite variation.


2014 ◽  
Vol 878 ◽  
pp. 489-495
Author(s):  
Feng Kong ◽  
Xiao Ye Zhang ◽  
Jie Hong Cheng ◽  
Zai Xin Mao ◽  
Yong Qiang Wang ◽  
...  

The performances of leaching-upflow blanket filter (UBF) anaerobic digestion for biogas production of kitchen waste was investigated. To find out the process parameter variations of acidification phase and the methane production performance of methanogenic phase, kitchen waste from division of environment sanitation management of Changzhou was used as feedstock. The results show that the ammonia in anaerobic system cumulated continuously throughout the digestion; pH value maintained at7.6; At first the value of COD ranged from 20000 mg/L to 140000 mg/L to the final UBF water 10000mg/L to 12000 mg/L; Volatile fatty acid (VFA) reduced to 150mg/L with the increase of the days; total nitrogen increases first and then decreases, finally, it keeps at 1600 mg/L; The concentration of alkalinity increased slightly; biogas production is stable, The rate of gas generation is above0.30 m3/kgCOD . These results provide a proof of the feasibility for kitchen waste anaerobic methane fermentation.


2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. S195-S201
Author(s):  
Feng Lei ◽  
Gao Yuan ◽  
Kou Wei ◽  
Li Rundong ◽  
Yu Meiling ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 485 ◽  
pp. 306-309
Author(s):  
Li Hong Wang ◽  
Qun Hui Wang ◽  
Wei Wei Cai

Solid-state anaerobic digestion (SSAD) of distiller’s grains (DG) and kitchen waste (KW) for biogas was investigated. Six DG to KW ratios of 10/1, 8/1, 6/1, 4/1, 1/0, and 0/1 was used. The results showed that in 48 digestion days the co-digestion with DG to KW ratio of 8:1 obtained the highest methane yield of 159.74mL/gTS, TS and VS reductions of 58.7% and 71.8%, hemicellulase, cellulose and lignin reductions of 46.7%, 45.4% and 4.0%. Compared to mono-digestions of DG or KW, co-digestion of DG and FW had a good synergistic effect. It indicated that SSAD of cellulosic-based waste and food waste could be one of the options for efficient biogas production and waste treatment


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Christine Trego ◽  
Evan Galvin ◽  
Conor Sweeney ◽  
Sinéad Dunning ◽  
Cillian Murphy ◽  
...  

AbstractMethanogenic sludge granules are densely packed, small (diameter, approx. 0.5-2.0 mm) spherical biofilms found in anaerobic digesters used to treat industrial wastewaters, where they underpin efficient organic waste conversion and biogas production. A single digester contains millions of individual granules, each of which is a highly-organised biofilm comprised of a complex consortium of likely billions of cells from across thousands of species – but not all granules are identical. Whilst each granule theoretically houses representative microorganisms from all of the trophic groups implicated in the successive and interdependent reactions of the anaerobic digestion process, parallel granules function side-by-side in digesters to provide a ‘meta-organism’ of sorts. Granules from a full-scale bioreactor were size-separated into small, medium and large granules. Laboratory-scale bioreactors were operated using only small (0.6–1 mm), medium (1–1.4 mm) or large (1.4–1.8 mm) granules, or unfractionated (naturally distributed) sludge. After >50 days of operation, the granule size distribution in each of the small, medium and large bioreactor types had diversified beyond – to both bigger and smaller than – the size fraction used for inoculation. ‘New’ granules were analysed by studying community structure based on high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing.Methanobacterium,Aminobacterium,PropionibacteriaceaeandDesulfovibriorepresented the majority of the community in new granules. H2-using, and not acetoclastic, methanogens appeared more important, and were associated with abundant syntrophic bacteria. Multivariate integration analyses identified distinct discriminant taxa responsible for shaping the microbial communities in different-sized granules, and along with alpha diversity data, indicated a possible biofilm life cycle.ImportanceMethanogenic granules are spherical biofilms found in the built environment, where despite their importance for anaerobic digestion of wastewater in bioreactors, little is understood about the fate of granules across their entire life. Information on exactly how, and at what rates, methanogenic granules develop will be important for more precise and innovative management of environmental biotechnologies. Microbial aggregates also spark interest as subjects in which to study fundamental concepts from microbial ecology, including immigration and species sorting affecting the assembly of microbial communities. This experiment is the first, of which we are aware, to compartmentalise methanogenic granules into discrete, size-resolved fractions, which were then used to separately start up bioreactors to investigate the granule life cycle. The evidence, and extent, ofde novogranule growth, and the identification of key microorganisms shaping new granules at different life-cycle stages, is important for environmental engineering and microbial ecology.


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