首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
In this study, biohydrogen production from glucose by two fermentative bacteria (Clostridium butyricum, a typical strictly anaerobic bacterium, and Klebsiella pneumoniae, a well-studied facultative anaerobic and nitrogen-fixing bacterium) are stiochiometrically analyzed according to energy (ATP), reducing equivalent and mass balances. The theoretical analysis reveals that the maximum yield of hydrogen on glucose by Clostridium butyricum is 3.26 mol/mol when all acetyl-CoA entering into the acetate pathway (α=1α=1), which is higher than that by Klebsiella pneumoniae under strictly anaerobic conditions. In the latter case, the maximum yield by Klebsiella pneumoniae is 2.86 mol hydrogen per mol glucose when five sevenths of acetyl-CoA is transformed to acetate. However, under microaerobic condition the maximum yield of hydrogen on glucose by Klebsiella pneumoniae could reach 6.68 mol/mol if all acetyl-CoA entered into tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle (γ=1γ=1) and a quantity of 53% of the reducing equivalents generated in the metabolism were completely oxidized by molecular oxygen. On the other hand, the relationship between hydrogen production and biomass formation is distinct by Clostridium butyricum from that by Klebsiella pneumoniae.   The former yield of hydrogen on glucose increases as biomass. In contrast, the latter one decreases as biomass in a certain range of molar fraction of acetate in total acetyl-CoA metabolism (5/7?β?05/7?β?0). Microaerobic condition is favorable for high hydrogen production with low biomass formation by Klebsiella pneumoniae   in a certain range of the molar fraction of all reducing equivalents oxidized completely by molecular oxygen (0.53?δ?0.830.53?δ?0.83).  相似文献   

2.
Dark fermentation is a promising biological method for hydrogen production because of its high production rate in the absence of light source and variety of the substrates. In this study, hydrogen production potential of four dark fermentative bacteria (Clostridium butyricum, Clostridium pasteurianum, Clostridium beijerinckii, and Enterobacter aerogenes) using glucose as substrate was investigated under anaerobic conditions. Batch experiments were conducted to study the effects of initial glucose concentration on hydrogen yield, hydrogen production rate and concentration of volatile fatty acids (VFA) in the effluents. Among the four different fermentative bacteria, C. butyricum showed great performance at 10 g/L of glucose with hydrogen production rate of 18.29 mL-H2/L-medium/hand specific hydrogen production rate of 3.90 mL-H2/g-biomass/h. In addition, it was found that the distribution of volatile fatty acids was different among the fermentative bacteria. C. butyricum and C. pasteurianum had higher ratio of acetate to butyrate compared to the other two species, which favored hydrogen generation.  相似文献   

3.
This study evaluates the potential of bioconversion of crude glycerol, discharged from biodiesel production plant, to hydrogen (H2) by an enriched microbial community. Microbial community was enriched from activated sludge in a medium amended with 2.5 g/L of crude glycerol. Optimal cultivation parameters for H2 production such as initial pH, cultivation temperature and substrate concentration were investigated. H2 yields from raw glycerol at optimal conditions (pH 6.5; 40 °C and 1 g/L raw glycerol) were 1.1 ± 0.1 mol-H2/mol-glycerolconsumed. H2 production was associated with acetate-butyrate type fermentation, along with ethanol as one of the end products. Kinetic experiments on H2 production from pure and crude glycerol indicated the absence of any inhibitory effects from the impurities present in crude glycerol. The community analysis revealed that the enriched microbial consortium was dominated mainly by Clostridium species.  相似文献   

4.
Dark fermentative hydrogen production by a hot spring culture was studied from different sugars in batch assays and from xylose in continuous stirred tank reactor (CSTR) with on-line pH control. Batch assays yielded hydrogen in following order: xylose > arabinose > ribose > glucose. The highest hydrogen yield in batch assays was 0.71 mol H2/mol xylose. In CSTR the highest H2 yield and production rate at 45 °C were 1.97 mol H2/mol xylose and 7.3 mmol H2/h/L, respectively, and at 37 °C, 1.18 mol H2/mol xylose and 1.7 mmol H2/h/L, respectively. At 45 °C, microbial community consisted of only two bacterial strains affiliated to Clostridium acetobutulyticum and Citrobacter freundii, whereas at 37 °C six Clostridial species were detected. In summary hydrogen yield by hot spring culture was higher with pentoses than hexoses. The highest H2 production rate and yield and thus, the most efficient hydrogen producing bacteria were obtained at suboptimal temperature of 45 °C for both mesophiles and thermophiles.  相似文献   

5.
In this study, hydrogen gas was produced from starch feedstock via combination of enzymatic hydrolysis of starch and dark hydrogen fermentation. Starch hydrolysis was conducted using batch culture of Caldimonas taiwanensis On1 able to hydrolyze starch completely under the optimal condition of 55 °C and pH 7.5, giving a yield of 0.46–0.53 g reducing sugar/g starch. Five H2-producing pure strains and a mixed culture were used for hydrogen production from raw and hydrolyzed starch. All the cultures could produce H2 from hydrolyzed starch, whereas only two pure strains (i.e., Clostridium butyricum CGS2 and CGS5) and the mixed culture were able to ferment raw starch. Nevertheless, all the cultures displayed higher hydrogen production efficiencies while using the starch hydrolysate, leading to a maximum specific H2 production rate of 116 and 118 ml/g VSS/h, for Cl. butyricumCGS2 and Cl. pasteurianum CH5, respectively. Meanwhile, the H2 yield obtained from strain CGS2 and strain CH5 was 1.23 and 1.28 mol H2/mol glucose, respectively. The best starch-fermenting strain Cl. butyricum CGS2 was further used for continuous H2 production using hydrolyzed starch as the carbon source under different hydraulic retention time (HRT). When the HRT was gradually shortened from 12 to 2 h, the specific H2 production rate increased from 250 to 534 ml/g  VSS/h, whereas the H2 yield decreased from 2.03 to 1.50  mol H2/mol glucose. While operating at 2 h HRT, the volumetric H2 production rate reached a high level of 1.5 l/h/l.  相似文献   

6.
This study explored the fermentative hydrogen production by immobilized microorganisms from glycerol, which is the byproduct of biodiesel production, and compared it with suspended fermentation. The effect of immobilization on hydrogen production process was examined. Results showed that both cumulative hydrogen production (CHP) and hydrogen yield (HY) were enhanced by microbial immobilization. The highest CHP and HY of 64 mL/100 mL and 0.52 mol H2/mol glycerol were obtained by immobilized microorganisms, compared to 9 mL/100 mL and 0.29 mol H2/mol glycerol in suspended microorganisms. Immobilization enhanced CHP and HY by 611.1% and 79.3%. In addition, immobilized microorganisms showed stronger tolerance to high substrate concentration and higher capability in glycerol utilization, which is of great significance for hydrogen production from glycerol. The enhanced hydrogen production may be due to the favorable micro-environment for different microorganisms in immobilized beads.  相似文献   

7.
A thermotolerant Klebsiella sp. TR17 for production of hydrogen from crude glycerol was investigated. Results from Plackett–Burman design indicated that the significant variables, which influenced hydrogen production, were KH2PO4 and NH4Cl (for buffer capacity and nitrogen source). Subsequently, the two selected variables and crude glycerol were optimized by the Central Composite design for achieving maximum hydrogen and ethanol yield. The concentration of crude glycerol, KH2PO4, and NH4Cl had an individual effect on both hydrogen and ethanol yield (p < 0.05), while KH2PO4 and NH4Cl had an interactive effect on ethanol yield (p < 0.05). The optimum medium components were 11.14 g/L crude glycerol, 2.47 g/L KH2PO4, and 6.03 g/L NH4Cl. The predicted maximum simultaneous hydrogen and ethanol yield were 0.27 mol H2/mol glycerol and 0.63 mol EtOH/mol glycerol, respectively. Validation of the predicted optimal conditions exhibited similar hydrogen and ethanol yield of 0.26 mol H2/mol glycerol and 0.58 mol EtOH/mol glycerol, respectively.  相似文献   

8.
The present study investigated hydrogen production potential of novel marine Clostridium amygdalinum strain C9 isolated from oil water mixtures. Batch fermentations were carried out to determine the optimal conditions for the maximum hydrogen production on xylan, xylose, arabinose and starch. Maximum hydrogen production was pH and substrate dependant. The strain C9 favored optimum pH 7.5 (40 mmol H2/g xylan) from xylan, pH 7.5–8.5 from xylose (2.2–2.5 mol H2/mol xylose), pH 8.5 from arabinose (1.78 mol H2/mol arabinose) and pH 7.5 from starch (390 ml H2/g starch). But the strain C9 exhibited mixed type fermentation was exhibited during xylose fermentation. NaCl is required for the growth and hydrogen production. Distribution of volatile fatty acids was initial pH dependant and substrate dependant. Optimum NaCl requirement for maximum hydrogen production is substrate dependant (10 g NaCl/L for xylose and arabinose, and 7.5 g NaCl/L for xylan and starch).  相似文献   

9.
Efficient conversion of glycerol waste from biodiesel manufacturing processes into biohydrogen by the hyperthermophilic eubacterium Thermotoga neapolitana DSM 4359 was investigated. Biohydrogen production by T. neapolitana was examined using the batch cultivation mode in culture medium containing pure glycerol or glycerol waste as the sole substrate. Pre-treated glycerol waste showed higher hydrogen (H2) production than untreated waste. Nitrogen (N2) sparging and pH control were successfully implemented to maintain the culture pH and to reduce H2 partial pressure in the headspace for optimal growth rate and to enhance hydrogen production from the glycerol waste. It was found that hydrogen production increased from 1.24 ± 0.06 to 1.98 ± 0.1 mol-H2 mol−1 glycerolconsumed by optimising N2 sparging and pH control. We observed that in medium containing 0.05 M HEPES, with three cycles of N2 sparging, the H2 yield increased to 2.73 ± 0.14 mol-H2 mol−1 glycerolconsumed, which was 2.22-fold higher than the non-N2 sparged H2 yield (1.23 ± 0.06 mol-H2 mol−1 glycerolconsumed).  相似文献   

10.
In this work, a carbohydrate-rich microalga, Chlorella vulgaris ESP6, was grown photoautotrophically to fix the CO2. The resulting microalgal biomass was hydrolyzed by acid or alkaline/enzymatic treatment and was then used for biohydrogen production with Clostridium butyricum CGS5. The C. vulgaris biomass could be effectively hydrolyzed by acid pretreatment while similar hydrolysis efficiency was achieved by combination of alkaline pretreatment and enzymatic hydrolysis. The biomass of C. vulgaris ESP6 containing a carbohydrate content of 57% (dry weight basis) was efficiently hydrolyzed by acid treatment with 1.5% HCl, giving a reducing sugars (RS) yield of nearly 100%. C. butyricum CGS5 could utilize RS from C. vulgaris ESP6 biomass to produce hydrogen without any additional organic carbon sources. The optimal conditions for hydrogen production were 37 °C and a microalgal hydrolysate loading of 9 g RS/L with pH-controlled at 5.5. Under the optimal conditions, the cumulative H2 production, H2 production rate, and H2 yield were 1476 ml/L, 246 ml/L/h, and 1.15 mol/mol RS, respectively. The results demonstrate that the C. vulgaris biomass has the potential to serve as effective feedstock for dark fermentative H2 production.  相似文献   

11.
Clostridium butyricum and Rhodopseudomonas faecalis RLD-53 were employed to produce hydrogen in mixed culture with glucose as sole substrate. Due to the great difference on growth rate and acid-resistant capacity between photo-fermentative bacteria and dark-fermentative bacteria, directly mixed culture of the two kinds of bacteria in different ratio was studied in this work. Hydrogen yield, volatile acids, pH and biomass in different periods were evaluated. Acetic acid and butyric acid produced by C. butyricum were dominant terminal fermentation products, and they were effective substrates for photo-fermentative bacteria. The cooperation was formed in a way like food chain. But compared to the production rate of volatile acids produced by C. butyricum, the utilization rate by photo-fermentative bacteria was far slower. The results demonstrated that the growth of photo-fermentative bacteria was limited when pH decreased sharply. The best ratio of C. butyricum to R. faecalis RLD-53 was 1:600. The maximum yield of hydrogen reached 122.4 ml-H2/vessel and hydrogen production rate was 0.5 ml-H2/ml-culture/day.  相似文献   

12.
Enriched activated sludge that can effectively convert crude glycerol into bio-hydrogen was selected by an eco-biotechnological approach, in very strict conditions, using biodiesel-derived glycerol as the only carbon source. The thus obtained functional consortium was characterized by the genera Klebsiella, Escherichia/Shigella and Cupriavidus. During enrichment, the dominant metabolic end-product shifted from a 1,3 propanediol to ethanol, with a concomitant increase of the hydrogen yield from 0.18 ± 0.003 to 0.66 ± 0.06 mol/mol and an almost five-fold increase of the hydrogen production. Glycerol degradation efficiency showed an increase of around 50%. In optimized and upscaled conditions it was possible to obtain a hydrogen production rate of 2960 mL H2/L/day ± 185 at a near stoichiometric yield (of 0.90 mol/mol ± 0.01), with a carbon recovery of almost 90%, both in sterile and non-sterile conditions. Glycerol was almost totally degraded (degradation efficiency of 97.42% ± 0.98), independently of the glycerol type used.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The effect of coculture of Clostridium butyricum and Escherichia coli on hydrogen production was investigated. C. butyricum and E. coli were grown separately and together as batch cultures. Gas production, growth, volatile fatty acid production and glucose degradation were monitored. Whilst C. butyricum alone produced 2.09 mol-H2/mol-glucose the coculture produced 1.65 mol-H2/mol-glucose. However, the coculture utilized glucose more efficiently in the batch culture, i.e., it was able to produce more H2 (5.85 mmol H2) in the same cultivation setting than C. butyricum (4.62 mmol H2), before the growth limiting pH was reached.  相似文献   

15.
Non-sterile operation of continuous stirred tank reactor (CSTR) augmented with Clostridium butyricum and fed with sugarcane juice was studied at various hydraulic retention time (HRT). The maximum hydrogen production rate and yield of 3.38 mmol H2/L/h and 1.0 mol H2/mol hexose consumed, respectively, were achieved at HRT 4 h. The relationship of the augmented microorganism and normal flora in the fermentation system under non-sterile condition were analyzed by polymerase chain reaction-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE). Initially, at HRT 36 h, other species related to Lactobacillus harbinensis and Klebseilla pneumoniae were present as a major group in the reactor. When HRT was decreased to 12, 6 and 4 h, C. butyricum was present with a competition between L. harbinensis and K. pneumoniae. Results indicated that augmented C. butyricum could compete with contaminated microorganisms during non-sterile operation at low HRT (12-4 h) with the support of normal flora (K. pneumoniae).  相似文献   

16.
Dark fermentative bacterial strains were isolated from riverbed sediments and investigated for hydrogen production. A series of batch experiments were conducted to study the effect of pH, substrate concentration and temperature on hydrogen production from a selected bacterial consortium, TERI BH05. Batch experiments for fermentative conversion of sucrose, starch, glucose, fructose, and xylose indicated that TERI BH05 effectively utilized all the five sugars to produce fermentative hydrogen. Glucose was the most preferred carbon source indicating highest hydrogen yields of 22.3 mmol/L. Acetic and butyric acid were the major soluble metabolites detected. Investigation on optimization of pH, temperature, and substrate concentration revealed that TERI BH05 produced maximum hydrogen at 37 °C, pH 6 with 8 g/L of glucose supplementation and maximum yield of hydrogen production observed was 2.0–2.3 mol H2/mol glucose. Characterization of TERI BH05 revealed the presence of two different bacterial strains showing maximum homology to Clostridium butyricum and Clostridium bifermentans.  相似文献   

17.
The biochemical hydrogen potential (BHP) tests were conducted to investigate the metabolism of glucose fermentation and hydrogen production performance of four Clostridial species, including C. acetobutylicum M121, C. butyricum ATCC19398, C. tyrobutyricum FYa102, and C. beijerinckii L9. Batch experiments showed that all the tested strains fermented glucose, reduced medium pH from 7.2 to a value between 4.6 and 5.0, and produced butyrate (0.37–0.67 mmol/mmol-glucose) and acetate (0.34–0.42 mmol/mmol-glucose) as primary soluble metabolites. Meanwhile, a significant amount of hydrogen gas was produced accompanied with glucose degradation and acid production. Among the strains examined, C. beijerinckii L9 had the highest hydrogen production yield of 2.81 mmol/mmol-glucose. A kinetic model was developed to evaluate the metabolism of glucose fermentation of those Clostridium species in the batch cultures. The model, in general, was able to accurately describe the profile of glucose degradation as well as production of biomass, butyrate, acetate, ethanol, and hydrogen observed in the batch tests. In the glucose re-feeding experiments, the C. tyrobutyricum FYa102 and C. beijerinckii L9 isolates fermented additional glucose during re-feeding tests, producing a substantial amount of hydrogen. In contrast, C. butyricum ATCC19398 was unable to produce more hydrogen despite additional supply of glucose, presumably due to the metabolic shift from acetate/butyrate to lactate/ethanol production.  相似文献   

18.
Bio-hydrogen production from glycerol by immobilized Enterobacter aerogenes ATCC 13048 on heat-treated upflow anaerobic sludge blanket (UASB) granules was examined in a UASB reactor. The organic loading rate (OLR) was optimized in order to maximize the hydrogen production rate (HPR). The maximum hydrogen content (37.1% and 24.2%) and HPR (9 and 6.2 mmol H2/L h) were achieved at the optimum OLR of 50 g/L d using pure and waste glycerol as the substrate, respectively. The major soluble metabolite products (SMPs) were ethanol, 1,3-propanediol (1,3-PD), formic acid, and acetic acid. The microbial community and microbial structure, analyzed by fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), revealed that the predominant hydrogen producers were E. aerogenes ATCC 13048 and firmicutes bacteria including Clostridium, Bacillus, and Dialister sp.  相似文献   

19.
Biohydrogen production from cellulosic waste materials using dark fermentation is a promising technology for producing renewable energy. The purpose of this study was to evaluate residual cellulosic materials generated from local sources for their H2 production potential without any pretreatment. Clostridium thermocellum ATCC 27405, a cellulolytic, thermophilic bacterium that has been shown to be capable of H2 production on both cellobiose and α-cellulose substrates, was used in simultaneous batch fermentation experiments with dried distillers grain (DDGs), barley hulls (BH) and fusarium head blight contaminated barley hulls (CBH) as the carbon source. Overall, the dried distillers grain produced the highest concentration of hydrogen gas at 1.27 mmol H2/glucose equivalent utilized. CBH and BH produced 1.18 and 1.24 mmol H2/glucose equivalent utilized, respectively. Overall, this study indicates that hydrogen derived from a variety of cellulosic waste biomass sources is a possible candidate for the development of sustainable energy.  相似文献   

20.
Biological systems offer a variety of ways by which to generate renewable energy. Among them, unicellular green algae have the ability to capture the visible portion of sunlight and store the energy as hydrogen (H2). They hold promise in generating a renewable fuel from nature's most plentiful resources, sunlight and water. Anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria have the ability of capturing the near infrared emission of sunlight to produce hydrogen while consuming small organic acids. Dark anaerobic fermentative bacteria consume carbohydrates, thus generating H2 and small organic acids. Whereas efforts are under way to develop each of these individual systems, little effort has been undertaken to combine and integrate these various processes for increased efficiency and greater yields. This work addresses the development of an integrated biological hydrogen production process based on unicellular green algae, which are driven by the visible portion of the solar spectrum, coupled with purple photosynthetic bacteria, which are driven by the near infrared portion of the spectrum. Specific methods have been tested for the cocultivation and production of H2 by the two different biological systems. Thus, a two-dimensional integration of photobiological H2 production has been achieved, resulting in better solar irradiance utilization (visible and infrared) and integration of nutrient utilization for the cost-effective production of substantial amounts of hydrogen gas. Approaches are discussed for the cocultivation and coproduction of hydrogen in green algae and purple photosynthetic bacteria entailing broad utilization of the solar spectrum. The possibility to improve efficiency even further is discussed, with dark anaerobic fermentations of the photosynthetic biomass, enhancing the H2 production process and providing a recursive link in the system to regenerate some of the original nutrients.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号