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1.
Rice straw was pretreated by microwave-assisted alkali to improve saccharification in enzymatic hydrolysis and hydrogen yield in combined dark- and photo-fermentation in this paper. A maximum reducing sugar yield of 69.3 g/100 g TVS was obtained when 50 g/l rice straw was pretreated by microwave heating for 15 min at 140 °C in 0.5% NaOH solution and then enzymatically hydrolyzed for 96 h. When hydrolyzed rice straw was used for hydrogen production by anaerobic bacteria in dark-fermentation, a maximum hydrogen yield of 155 ml/g TVS was obtained. The residual solution (mainly acetate and butyrate) from dark-fermentation was reutilized for hydrogen production by immobilized photosynthetic bacteria in photo-fermentation. By combination of dark- and photo-fermentation, the maximum hydrogen yield was greatly enhanced to 463 ml/g TVS, which is 43.2% of the theoretical hydrogen yield.  相似文献   

2.
Hydrogen production from Arthrospira (Spirulina) platensis wet biomass through heterofermentation by the [FeFe] hydrogenase of hydrogenogens (hydrogen-producing bacteria) and autofermentation by the [NiFe] hydrogenase of Arthrospira platensis was discussed under dark anaerobic conditions. In heterofermentation, wet cyanobacterial biomass without pretreatment was hardly utilized by hydrogenogens for hydrogen production. But the carbohydrates in cyanobacterial cells released after cell wall disruption were effectively utilized by hydrogenogens for hydrogen production. Wet cyanobacterial biomass was pretreated with boiling and bead milling, ultrasonication, and ultrasonication and enzymatic hydrolysis. Wet cyanobacterial biomass pretreated with ultrasonication and enzymatic hydrolysis achieved the maximum reducing sugar yield of 0.407 g/g-DW (83.0% of the theoretical reducing sugar yield). Different concentrations (10 g/l to 40 g/l) of pretreated wet cyanobacterial biomass were used as substrate to produce fermentative hydrogen by hydrogenogens, which were domesticated with the pretreated wet cyanobacterial biomass as carbon source. The maximum hydrogen yield of 92.0 ml H2/g-DW was obtained at 20 g/l of wet cyanobacterial biomass. The main soluble metabolite products (SMPs) in the residual solutions from heterofermentation were acetate and butyrate. In autofermentation, hydrogen yield decreased from 51.4 ml H2/g-DW to 11.0 ml H2/g-DW with increasing substrate concentration from 1 g/l to 20 g/l. The main SMPs in the residual solutions from autofermentation were acetate and ethanol. The hydrogen production peak rate and hydrogen yield at 20 g/l of wet cyanobacterial biomass in heterofermentation showed 110- and 8.4-fold increases, respectively, relative to those in autofementation.  相似文献   

3.
In order to efficiently utilize the biomass waste of algae bloom in Taihu Lake, China and improve energy conversion efficiency, a three-stage process comprising dark hydrogen fermentation with acid-domesticated hydrogenogens, photohydrogen fermentation, and methanogenesis was undertaken. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analyses showed that algal cells pretreated by microwave heating with diluted acid were degraded into smaller fragments (<5 μm) than those pretreated by steam heating with diluted acid. The microwave pretreatment of algae resulted in higher saccharification efficiency. The domesticated hydrogenogens in presence of acids improved the dark hydrogen production from microwave-pretreated algae biomass and led to a total combined dark and photofermentation hydrogen yield of 283.4 mL/g-total volatile solid (TVS). The energy conversion efficiency of steam-pretreated algae biomass remarkably increased to 47.0% by cogenerating 256.7 mL/g-TVS hydrogen and 253.5 mL/g-TVS methane in the three-stage process: dark-fermentation, photofermentation, and methanogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
In this study, we investigated a two-phase process of combining the dark- and photo-fermentation methods to reutilize the residual solution derived from dark fermentation and increase the hydrogen yield (HY) from glucose. In dark fermentation, an orthogonal experimental design was used to optimize the culture medium for Clostridium butyricum (C. butyricum). The optimal culture medium composition was determined as glucose 20 g/l, NaCl 3 g/l, MgCl2 0.1 g/l, FeCl2 0.1 g/l, K2HPO4 2.5 g/l, l-cysteine 0.5 g/l, vitamin solution 10 ml/l, and trace element solution 10 ml/l. In this method, the maximum HY increased from 1.59 to 1.72 mol H2/mol glucose and hydrogen production rate (HPR) from 86.8 to 100 ml H2/l/h. The metabolite byproducts from dark fermentation, mostly containing acetate and butyrate, were inoculated with Rhodopseudomonas palustris (R. palustris) and reutilized to produce hydrogen in photo-fermentation. In photo-fermentation, the maximum HY was 4.16 mol H2/mol glucose, and the maximum removal ratios of acetate and butyrate were 92.3% and 99.8%, respectively. Combining dark fermentation and photo-fermentation caused a dramatic increase of HY from 1.59 to 5.48 mol H2/mol glucose. The conversion efficiency of heat value in dark fermentation surged from 13.3% to 46.0% in the two-phase system.  相似文献   

5.
This study aims to produce hydrogen from sludge of poultry slaughterhouse wastewater treatment plant (5% total solid) by anaerobic batch fermentation with Enterobactor aerogenes or mixed cultures from hot spring sediment as the inoculums. Sludge was heated in microwave at 850 W for 3 min. Results indicated that a soluble chemical oxygen demand (sCOD) of pretreated sludge was higher than that of raw sludge. Pretreated sludge inoculated with E. aerogenes and supplemented with the Endo nutrient had a higher hydrogen yield (12.77 mL H2/g tCOD) than the raw sludge (0.18 mL H2/g tCOD). When considered the hydrogen yield, the optimum initial pH for hydrogen production from microwave pretreated sludge was 5.5 giving the maximum value of 12.77 mL H2/g tCOD. However, when considered the hydrogen production rate (Rm), the optimum pH for hydrogen production would be 9.0 with the maximum Rm of 22.80 mL H2/L sludge·h.  相似文献   

6.
Mixed bacteria were used to improve hydrogen yield from cassava starch in combination of dark and photo fermentation. In dark fermentation, mixed anaerobic bacteria (mainly Clostridium species) were used to produce hydrogen from cassava starch. Substrate concentration, fermentation temperature and pH were optimized as 10.4 g/l, 31 °C and 6.3 by response surface methodology (RSM). The maximum hydrogen yield and production rate in dark fermentation were 351 ml H2/g starch (2.53 mol H2/mol hexose) and 334.8 ml H2/l/h, respectively. In photo fermentation, immobilized mixed photosynthetic bacteria (PSB, mainly Rhodopseudomonaspalustris species) were used to produce hydrogen from soluble metabolite products (SMP, mainly acetate and butyrate) of dark fermentation. The maximum hydrogen yield in photo fermentation was 489 ml H2/g starch (3.54 mol H2/mol hexose). The total hydrogen yield was significantly increased from 402 to 840 ml H2/g starch (from 2.91 to 6.07 mol H2/mol hexose) by mixed bacteria and cell immobilization in combination of dark and photo fermentation.  相似文献   

7.
This paper investigates the integrated catalytic adsorption (ICA) steam gasification of palm kernel shell for hydrogen rich gas production using pilot scale fluidized bed gasifier under atmospheric condition. The effect of temperature (600–750 °C) and steam to biomass ratio (1.5–2.5 wt/wt) on hydrogen (H2) yield, product gas composition, gas yield, char yield, gasification and carbon conversion efficiency, and lower heating values are studied. The results show that H2 hydrogen composition of 82.11 vol% is achieved at temperature of 675 °C, and negligible carbon dioxide (CO2) composition is observed at 600 °C and 675 °C at a constant steam to biomass ratio of 2.0 wt/wt. In addition, maximum H2 yield of 150 g/kg biomass is observed at 750 °C and at steam to biomass ratio of 2.0 wt/wt. A good heating value of product gas which is 14.37 MJ/Nm3 is obtained at 600 °C and steam to biomass ratio of 2.0 wt/wt. Temperature and steam to biomass ratio both enhanced H2 yield but temperature is the most influential factor. Utilization of adsorbent and catalyst produced higher H2 composition, yield and gas heating values as demonstrated by biomass catalytic steam gasification and steam gasification with in situ CO2 adsorbent.  相似文献   

8.
The bio-hydrogen production potential from corn stalk was significantly affected by microwave irradiation pretreatment of cow dung compost in batch tests. The maximum hydrogen yield of 144.3 ml/g-corn stalk and hydrogen production rate of 3.6 ml/g-corn stalk h−1 were observed using the pretreated compost by microwave radiation of 1.5 min at fixed Na2CO3 dosage of 800 mg/l, Fe dosage of 400 mg/l, substrate concentration of 20 g/l, which increased about 99.6% and 85.2% compared with that of the control. The effects of microwave irradiation on microbial characteristics were further discussed by Atomic Force Microscope (AFM), determination of protein content and PCR-DGGE. The four dominant hydrogen-producing strains had been isolated and confirmed to be Bacillus amyloliquefaciens, Bacillus licheniformis, Bacillus subtilis and Enterococcus faecium, respectively. The diversity and symbiosis relations of the mixed bacteria were also observed in fermentation hydrogen production process.  相似文献   

9.
Oil palm empty fruit bunch (OPEFB) was pretreated by local plantation industry to increase the accessibility towards its fermentable sugars. This pretreatment process led to the formation of a dark sugar-rich molasses byproduct. The total carbohydrate content of the molasses was 9.7 g/L with 4.3 g/L xylose (C5H10O5). This pentose-rich molasses was fed as substrate for biohydrogen production using locally isolated Clostridium butyricum KBH1. The effect of initial pH and substrate concentration on the yield and productivity of hydrogen production were investigated in this study. The best result for the fermentation performed in 70 mL working volume was obtained at the initial reaction condition of pH 9, 150 rpm, 37 °C and 5.9 g/L total carbohydrate. The maximum hydrogen yield was 1.24 mol H2/mol pentose and the highest productivity rate achieved was 0.91 mmol H2/L/h. The optimal pH at pH 9 was slightly unusual due to the presence of inhibitors, mainly furfural. The furfural content decreased proportionally as pH was increased. The optimal experiment condition was repeated and continued in fermentation volume of 200 mL. The maximum hydrogen yield found for this run was 1.21 mol H2/mol pentose while the maximum productivity was 1.1 mmol H2/L/h. The major soluble metabolites in the fermentation were n-butyric acid and acetic acid.  相似文献   

10.
The combination of dark and photo fermentation was studied with cassava starch as the substrate to increase the hydrogen yield and alleviate the environmental pollution. The different raw cassava starch concentrations of 10–25 g/l give different hydrogen yields in the dark fermentation inoculated with the mixed hydrogen-producing bacteria derived from the preheated activated sludge. The maximum hydrogen yield (HY) of 240.4 ml H2/g starch is obtained at the starch concentration of 10 g/l and the maximum hydrogen production rate (HPR) of 84.4 ml H2/l/h is obtained at the starch concentration of 25 g/l. When the cassava starch, which is gelatinized by heating or hydrolyzed with α-amylase and glucoamylase, is used as the substrate to produce hydrogen, the maximum HY respectively increases to 258.5 and 276.1 ml H2/g starch, and the maximum HPR respectively increases to 172 and 262.4 ml H2/l/h. Meanwhile, the lag time (λ) for hydrogen production decreases from 11 h to 8 h and 5 h respectively, and the fermentation duration decreases from 75–110 h to 44–68 h. The metabolite byproducts in the dark fermentation, which are mainly acetate and butyrate, are reused as the substrates in the photo fermentation inoculated with the Rhodopseudomonas palustris bacteria. The maximum HY and HPR are respectively 131.9 ml H2/g starch and 16.4 ml H2/l/h in the photo fermentation, and the highest utilization ratios of acetate and butyrate are respectively 89.3% and 98.5%. The maximum HY dramatically increases from 240.4 ml H2/g starch only in the dark fermentation to 402.3 ml H2/g starch in the combined dark and photo fermentation, while the energy conversion efficiency increases from 17.5–18.6% to 26.4–27.1% if only the heat value of cassava starch is considered as the input energy. When the input light energy in the photo fermentation is also taken into account, the whole energy conversion efficiency is 4.46–6.04%.  相似文献   

11.
Algal blooms can be harvested as renewable biomass waste for gaseous biofuel production. However, the rigid cell structure of raw algae may hinder efficient microbial conversion for production of biohydrogen and biomethane. To improve the energy conversion efficiency, biomass from an algal bloom in Dianchi Lake was subjected to a hydrothermal/steam acid pretreatment prior to sequential dark hydrogen fermentation and anaerobic digestion. Results from X-ray diffraction and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy suggest that hydrothermal acid pretreatment leads to stronger damage of the amorphous structure (including hemicellulose and amorphous cellulose) due to the acid pretreatment, as evidenced by the higher crystallinity index. Scanning electron microscopy analysis showed that smaller fragments (∼5 mm) and wider cell gaps (∼1 μm) on algal cell surfaces occurred after pretreatment. In comparison to steam acid pretreatment, hydrothermal acid pretreatment resulted in a maximum energy conversion efficiency of 44.1% as well as production of 24.96 mL H2/g total volatile solids (TVS) and 299.88 mL CH4/g TVS.  相似文献   

12.
Biomass gasification is an important method to obtain renewable hydrogen. However, this technology still stagnates in a laboratory scale because of its high-energy consumption. In order to get maximum hydrogen yield and decrease energy consumption, this study applies a self-heated downdraft gasifier as the reactor and uses char as the catalyst to study the characteristics of hydrogen production from biomass gasification. Air and oxygen/steam are utilized as the gasifying agents. The experimental results indicate that compared to biomass air gasification, biomass oxygen/steam gasification improves hydrogen yield depending on the volume of downdraft gasifier, and also nearly doubles the heating value of fuel gas. The maximum lower heating value of fuel gas reaches 11.11 MJ/N m3 for biomass oxygen/steam gasification. Over the ranges of operating conditions examined, the maximum hydrogen yield reaches 45.16 g H2/kg biomass. For biomass oxygen/steam gasification, the content of H2 and CO reaches 63.27–72.56%, while the content of H2 and CO gets to 52.19–63.31% for biomass air gasification. The ratio of H2/CO for biomass oxygen/steam gasification reaches 0.70–0.90, which is lower than that of biomass air gasification, 1.06–1.27. The experimental and comparison results prove that biomass oxygen/steam gasification in a downdraft gasifier is an effective, relatively low energy consumption technology for hydrogen-rich gas production.  相似文献   

13.
This study describes a novel Hybrid Microwave Plasma Enhanced Gasification (HMPEG) method for converting plastic waste into hydrogen (H2). Thermal processing of plastic waste is a low-cost method of producing H2. Current methods, however, such as pyrolysis and gasification, are limited by inefficient heating and contaminants in syngas, resulting in a low H2 yield. Our approach consists of a novel rotary pyrolysis reactor that employs an external microwave heater and an electrodeless microwave torch reformer, thereby addressing issues with current methods. In this study, pyrolysis of mixed plastic produces pyro-gas which is reformed at a temperature above 1500 °C by the steam plasma torch powered by microwave. The result is a 150 g/kg H2 yield with a 67 vol.% higher production rate, an H2/CO ratio of 7, and a conversion efficiency of 97.4%. Tar and dioxin concentrations in the syngas were found to be 0.078 g/Nm3 and 0.024 ng-TEQ/Nm3, respectively, much less than the legal limit. A novel microwave pyrolyzer cuts electrical power consumption by half, and the pure H2 produced is suitable for direct use in hydrogen cars, power generation, and other applications. Once implemented, the energy-efficient HMPEG could aid in expanding H2 commercial plants that use plastic waste as a raw input fuel.  相似文献   

14.
Microwave alkali pretreated sugarcane bagasse was used as a substrate for production of cellulolytic enzymes, needed for biomass hydrolysis. The pretreated sugarcane bagasse was enzymatic hydrolyzed by crude unprocessed enzymes cellulase (Filter paper activity 9.4 FPU/g), endoglucanase (carboxymethylcellulase, 148 IU/g), β-glucosidase (116 IU/g) and xylanase (201 IU/g) produced by Aspergillus flavus using pretreated sugarcane bagasse as substrate under solid state fermentation. Concentrated enzymatic hydrolyzate was used for ethanol production using Saccharomyces cerevisiae immobilized on various matrices. The yield of ethanol was 0.44 gp/gs in case of yeast immobilized sugarcane bagasse, 0.38 gp/gs using Ca-alginate and 0.33 gp/gs using agar-agar as immobilization matrices. The immobilized yeast studied up to 10 cycles in case of immobilized sugarcane bagasse and up to 4 cycles in case of agar-agar and calcium alginate for ethanol production under repeated batch fermentation study.  相似文献   

15.
Corn cob is a promising hydrogen fermentation substrate, not only because of its abundant and low cost, but also because of its high cellulose and hemicellulose content. However, little information is available on the use of corn cob as a feedstock for hydrogen production. In this study, corn cob was hydrolyzed by cellulase after acid steam-explosion, alkali soaking, or steam-explosion pretreatment. The liquid products of pretreatment and the enzymatic hydrolysates were then used as carbon sources for hydrogen production by Clostridium hydrogeniproducens HR-1. Pretreatment followed by enzymatic hydrolysis yielded 720, 670, and 530 mg reducing sugars/g corn cob, and the hydrogen yield from corn cob reached 119, 100, and 83 ml H2/g corn cob, which is 55.9%, 46.7%, and 38.8% of the theoretical hydrogen yield from corn cob using C. hydrogeniproducens HR-1, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
In this paper, the high concentration of corn stalk (60 g/L) was employed as feedstock to produce bio-hydrogen and methane by combining hydrogen fermentation and anaerobic digestion. In the first stage of hydrogen fermentation, the effects of several key parameters, such as strain enhancement technique, cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB), NH4HCO3 on hydrogen production from cornstalk were investigated and optimized. The maximum hydrogen yield of 79.8 ± 1.5 ml H2/g-TS and hydrogen production rate of 3.78 ml/g-cornstalk h was observed at fixed acidizing cornstalk of 60 g/L, strains Bacillus sp. FS2011 dosage of 10%(v/v), CTAB of 30 mg/L, NH4HCO3 of 1.2 g/L and initial pH of 7.5 ± 0.5 at 36 ± 1 °C, respectively. In the second stage of anaerobic digestion, the effluent from hydrogen production bio-reactor was further employed as the feedstock to produce methane by methanogenic bacteria, the maximum methane yield of 227 ± 2.5 ml CH4/g-COD and COD removal rate of 95  ± 1% was recorded. The interesting observations were that the total amount of the organic wastewater produced in a higher substrate concentration (60 g/l) by hydrogen fermentation was reduced by about two-thirds compared with that of traditional low substrate concentration (≤20 g/l).  相似文献   

17.
Cryptococcus curvatus has great potential in fermenting unconditioned hydrolysates of sweet sorghum bagasse. With hydrolysates obtained by enzymatic hydrolysis of the solid pretreated by microwave with lime, the maximal yeast cell dry weight and lipid content were 10.83 g/l and 73.26%, respectively. For hydrolysates obtained in the same way but without lime, these two parameters were 15.50 g/l and 63.98%, respectively. During yeast fermentation, glucose and xylose were consumed simultaneously while cellobiose was released from the residual bagasse. The presence of lime, on one hand, made cellulose more accessible to enzymes as evidenced by higher total reducing sugar release compared to that without during enzymatic hydrolysis step; on the other hand, it caused the degradation of sugars to non-sugar chemicals during pretreatment step. As a result, higher lipid yield of 0.11 g/g bagasse or 0.65 ton/hectare of land was achieved from the pathway of microwave pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis while 0.09 g/g bagasse or 0.51 ton/hectare of land was attained from the process of lime-assisted microwave pretreatment followed by the same enzymatic saccharification.  相似文献   

18.
Cornstalk is a typical cellulose material, which can be used by photo-fermentative H2 production after pretreatment. However, the pretreatment methods have different influence on photo fermentation. In this study, 25.0 g cornstalk was pretreated by HCl/NaOH/cellusase. The hydrolysis rates increased from 45.51% by ddH2O-treatment to 60.79% by diluted HCl-treatment and 51.6% by NaOH-treatment. The corresponding reducing sugar yields were 0.13 g/g, 0.42 g/g and 0.01 g/g, respectively. Enzymatic treatment enhanced the corresponding cornstalk hydrolysis rates to 50.81%, 67.60% and 64.10% with reducing sugar yields of 0.22 g/g, 0.62 g/g and 0.26 g/g. The sorts and concentrations of carbon source for H2 production vary among different hydrolysates. Photo-fermentative H2 production of strain R. capsulatus JL1 and mutant JL1601 (cheR2-) with hydrolysates were investigated. The maximum H2 yield of 123.8 ± 14.2 mL/g by strain JL1 was obtained from alkali-enzyme pretreated cornstalk, while the H2 yield of 224.9 ± 5.2 mL/g by mutant JL1601 (cheR2-) was obtained with acid-enzyme hydrolysate as the substrates. Meanwhile, the alkali pretreated cornstalk was the worst for photo-fermentation of both strain JL1 and mutant JL1601 (cheR2-). Nevertheless, the highest substrate conversion efficiencies for both strains were obtained from ddH2O-pretreated hydrolysate. Two-step pretreated hydrolysates were more beneficial to H2 production for mutant JL1601 (cheR2-) but not for strain JL1.  相似文献   

19.
Pretreatment of grasses is required to maximize ethanol yield during fermentation. T85 bermudagrass and Merkeron napiergrass (Pennisetum purpureum Schumach.) were either left untreated or were pressurized batch hot water (PBHW) pretreated for 2 min at 230 °C at 5% w/v whole grass solids loading. Following a 24 h enzymatic digestion, untreated and PBHW pretreated grasses were evaluated for ethanol production and co-product generation including potential fermentation inhibitors. Fermentations of PBHW pretreated grasses with E. coli LY01 produced twice the ethanol of their untreated counterparts. PBHW pretreated Merkeron napiergrass produced 224.5 mg/g grass ethanol (73% maximum theoretical yield) and PBHW pretreated T85 bermudagrass reached 213.0 mg/g grass (70% maximum theoretical ethanol yield). Pretreatment by PBHW resulted in increased solubilization of hemicelluloses. PBHW pretreatment also produced potential fermentation inhibitors such as acetic, formic, cinnamic acids, and aldehydes. Despite some of these inhibitors remaining with the solids after PBHW pretreatment, there was more efficient hydrolysis of the cellulose and remaining hemicellulose during the enzymatic digestion of the grasses prior to fermentation when compared to the untreated grasses. This increase in digestibility observed with enzymes prior to fermentation resulted in increased ethanol yields during bioconversion using E. coli LY01 as the biocatalyst.  相似文献   

20.
A major constraint in the enzymatic saccharification of biomass for ethanol production is the cost of cellulase enzymes. Production cost of cellulases may be brought down by multifaceted approaches which include the use of cheap lignocellulosic substrates for fermentation production of the enzyme, and the use of cost efficient fermentation strategies like solid state fermentation (SSF). In the present study, cellulolytic enzymes for biomass hydrolysis were produced using solid state fermentation on wheat bran as substrate. Crude cellulase and a relatively glucose tolerant BGL were produced using fungi Trichoderma reesei RUT C30 and Aspergillus niger MTCC 7956, respectively. Saccharification of three different feed stock, i.e. sugar cane bagasse, rice straw and water hyacinth biomass was studied using the enzymes. Saccharification was performed with 50 FPU of cellulase and 10 U of β-glucosidase per gram of pretreated biomass. Highest yield of reducing sugars (26.3 g/L) was obtained from rice straw followed by sugar cane bagasse (17.79 g/L). The enzymatic hydrolysate of rice straw was used as substrate for ethanol production by Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The yield of ethanol was 0.093 g per gram of pretreated rice straw.  相似文献   

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