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1.
The study of photosynthetic hydrogen production by using Rhodobacter sphaeroides RV from acetate was described. We investigated the effects of light source (fluorescent, halogen and tungsten lamps), light intensity (1200–6000 lux), inoculum quantity (OD660 0.212–OD660 1.082) and initial pH (4.0–10.0) on biohydrogen production. The results indicated that the hydrogen production for halogen and tungsten lamps was better than it for fluorescent lamp as light source. The best light intensity of hydrogen production was 3600 lux for tungsten lamp as light source. Inoculum quantity experiments indicated that the higher hydrogen production volume and hydrogen conversion rate were obtained at initial OD660 of 0.931. The effect of initial pH on hydrogen production indicated that the maximum hydrogen yield reached to 653.2 mmol H2/mol acetate at initial pH 7.0.  相似文献   

2.
A preliminary study on photoproduction of hydrogen by Rhodobacter capsulatus KU002 isolated from leather industry effluents under different cultural conditions with various carbon and nitrogen sources was investigated. Hydrogen production was measured using a Gas chromatograph. Lactate promoted more amounts of hydrogen production under anaerobic light conditions and aerobic light conditions. Cumulative hydrogen production by the organism was recorded at various time intervals. Incubation period of 120 h was optimum for production of hydrogen. pH 7.0 ± 0.2 was optimum for production of hydrogen by growing cells, while pH 7.5 ± 0.26 for resting cells. l-cystine was a good nitrogen source for production of hydrogen. Growing cells produced more amount of hydrogen than resting cells. Glutamine was a poor nitrogen source for hydrogen production by Rb. capsulatus. Significance of the above results in the presence of existing literature is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
This study evaluates the effect of pH (4-7) on fermentative biohydrogen production by utilizing three isolated Clostridium species. Fermentative batch experiments show that the maximum hydrogen yield for Clostridium butyricum CGS2 (1.77 mmol/mmol glucose) is achieved at pH 6, whereas a high hydrogen production with Clostridium beijerinckii L9 (1.72 mmol/mmol glucose) and Clostridium tyrobutyricum FYa102 (1.83 mmol/mmol glucose) could be achieved under uncontrolled pH conditions (initial pH of 6.4-6.6 and final pH of 4-4.2). Low hydrogen yields (0-0.6 mmol/mmol glucose) observed at pH 4 are due likely to inhibitory effects on the microbial growth, although a low pH can be thermodynamically favorable for hydrogen production. The low hydrogen yields (0.12-0.64 mmol/mmol glucose) observed at pH 7 are attributed not only to thermodynamically unfavorable, but also metabolically unfavorable for hydrogen production. The relatively high levels of lactate, propionate, or formate observed at pH 7 reflect presumably the high enzymatic activities responsible for their production, together with the low hydrogenase activity, resulting in a low hydrogen production. A correlation analysis of the data from present and previous studies on biohydrogen production with pure Clostridium cultures and mixed microflora indicates a close relation between the hydrogen yield (YH2) and the (YH2)/(2(YHAc+YHBu)) ratio, with the observed correlation coefficient (0.787) higher than that (0.175) between YH2 and the molar ratio of butyrate to acetate (B/A). Based on the (YH2)/(2(YHAc+YHBu)) ratios observed at different pHs, a control of pH at 5.5-6.8 would seem to be an effective means to enhance the fermentative biohydrogen production.  相似文献   

4.
Hydrogen production using cellulosic residues offers the possibility of waste minimization with renewable energy recovery. In the present study, heat-treated biomass purified from leachate was used as inoculum in batch reactors for hydrogen production fed with different concentrations of cellulose (2.5, 5.0 and 10 g/L), in the presence and absence of exogenous cellulase. The heat-treated biomass did not degrade cellulose and hydrogen production was not detected in the absence of cellulase. In reactors with cellulase, the hydrogen yields were 1.2, 0.6 and 2.3 mol H2/mol of hydrolyzed cellulose with substrate degradation of 41.4, 28.4 and 44.7% for 2.5, 5.0 and 10 g/L cellulose, respectively. Hydrogen production potentials (P) varied from 19.9 to 125.9 mmol H2 and maximum hydrogen production rates (Rm) were among 0.8–2.3 mmol H2/h. The reactor containing 10 g/L of cellulose presented the highest P and Rm among the conditions tested. The main acid produced in reactors were butyric acid, followed by acetic, isobutyric and propionic acids. Bacteria similar to Clostridium sp. (98–99%) were identified in the reactors with cellulase. The heat-treated leachate can be used as an inoculum source for hydrogen production from hydrolyzed cellulose.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Photofermentative hydrogen production is influenced by several parameters, including feed composition, pH levels, temperature and light intensity. In this study, experimental results obtained from batch cultures of Rhodobacter capsulatus DSM 1710 were analyzed to locate the maximum levels for the rate and yield of hydrogen production with respect to temperature and light intensity. For this purpose, a 3k general full factorial design was employed, using temperatures of 20, 30 and 38 °C and light intensities of 100, 200 and 340 W/m2. ANOVA results confirmed that these two parameters significantly affect hydrogen production. Surface and contour plots of the regression models revealed a maximum hydrogen production rate of 0.566 mmol H2/L/h at 27.5 °C and 287 W/m2 and a maximum hydrogen yield of 0.326 mol H2/mol substrate at 26.8 °C and 285 W/m2. Validation experiments at the calculated optima supported these findings.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Two out of six bacterial isolates obtained from the guts of Globitermes sp. termites were identified as hydrogen-producing bacteria. One isolate, Enterobacter cloacae KBH3, was characterised using the BIOLOG identification system and 16S rRNA gene analysis. In a batch fermentation study to evaluate its growth in defined medium, E. cloacae KBH3 produced 154 ml H2 per litre medium with approximately 50% hydrogen content. The carbon utilisation results suggest that E. cloacae KBH3 have the potential to be a good hydrogen producer. This strain is also able to produce hydrogen within a wide range of temperatures (28–40 °C) and pH (4.5–8). In several fermentation runs, the pH of the culture dropped from 6.5 to 5.36 within the first 3 h, which was mostly due to the biosynthesis of formate. An increase of cumulative hydrogen production was recorded as well as a decrease in the concentration of formate, indicating the importance of the formate pathway for hydrogen production. The highest rate of hydrogen production of 180.74 ml H2/l/h was achieved when lactate and acetate were at their highest concentrations. Most of the hydrogen gas was produced during the exponential growth phase, and the biogas continued to be produced during the stationary phase. The specific growth rate was calculated to be 0.224 per hour while the hydrogen yield was 1.8 mol of hydrogen per mol of glucose. At the end of the batch study, the highest cumulative hydrogen production was 2404 ml H2 per litre of fermentation medium.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
This study presents the production of biohydrogen from rice mill wastewater. The acid hydrolysis and enzymatic hydrolysis operating conditions were optimized, for better reducing sugar production. The effect of pH and fermentation time on biohydrogen production from acid and enzymatic hydrolyzed rice mill wastewater was investigated, using Enterobacter aerogenes and Citrobacter ferundii. The enzymatic hydrolysis produced the maximum reducing sugar (15.8 g/L) compared to acid hydrolysis (14.2 g/L). The growth data obtained for E. aerogenes and C. ferundii, fitted well with the Logistic equation. The hydrogen yields of 1.74 mol H2/mol reducing sugar, and 1.40 mol H2/mol reducing sugar, were obtained from the hydrolyzate obtained from enzymatic and acid hydrolysis, respectively. The maximum hydrogen yield was obtained from E. aerogenes compared to C. ferundii, and the optimum pH for better hydrogen production was found to be in the range from 6.5 to 7.0. The chemical oxygen demand (COD) reduction obtained was around 71.8% after 60 h of fermentation.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Increasing awareness of environmental problems caused by the current use of fossil fuel-based energy, has led to the search for alternatives. Hydrogen is a good alternative and the cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 is naturally able to produce molecular hydrogen, photosynthetically from water and light. However, this H2 is rapidly consumed by the uptake hydrogenase.This study evaluated the hydrogen production of Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 wild-type and mutants: hupL (deficient in the uptake hydrogenase), hoxH (deficient in the bidirectional hydrogenase) and hupL/hoxH (deficient in both hydrogenases) on several experimental conditions, such as gas atmosphere (argon and propane with or without N2 and/or CO2 addition), light intensity (54 and 152 ??Em−2s−1), light regime (continuous and light/dark cycles 16 h/8 h) and nickel concentrations in the culture medium.In every assay, the hupL and hupL/hoxH mutants stood out over wild-type cells and the hoxH mutant. Nevertheless, the hupL mutant showed the best hydrogen production except in an argon atmosphere under 16 h light/8 h dark cycles at 54 ??Em−2s−1 in the light period, with 1 ??M of NiCl2 supplementation in the culture medium, and under a propane atmosphere.In all strains, higher light intensity leads to higher hydrogen production and if there is a daily 1% of CO2 addition in the gas atmosphere, hydrogen production could increase 5.8 times, related to the great increase in heterocysts differentiation (5 times more, approximately), whereas nickel supplementation in the culture medium was not shown to increase hydrogen production. The daily incorporation of 1% of CO2 plus 1% of N2 did not affect positively hydrogen production rate.  相似文献   

13.
Glycerol is an inevitable by-product from biodiesel synthesis process and could be a promising feedstock for fermentative hydrogen production. In this study, the feasibility of using crude glycerol from biodiesel industry for biohydrogen production was evaluated using seven isolated hydrogen-producing bacterial strains (Clostridium butyricum, Clostridium pasteurianum, and Klebsiella sp.). Among the strains examined, C. pasteurianum CH4 exhibited the best biohydrogen-producing performance under the optimal conditions of: temperature, 35 °C; initial pH, 7.0; agitation rate, 200 rpm; glycerol concentration, 10 g/l. When using pure glycerol as carbon source for continuous hydrogen fermentation, the average H2 production rate and H2 yield were 103.1 ± 8.1 ml/h/l and 0.50 ± 0.02 mol H2/mol glycerol, respectively. In contrast, when using crude glycerol as the carbon source, the H2 production rate and H2 yield was improved to 166.0 ± 8.7 ml/h/l and 0.77 ± 0.05 mol H2/mol glycerol, respectively. This work demonstrated the high potential of using biodiesel by-product, glycerol, for cost-effective biohydrogen production.  相似文献   

14.
A thermotolerant fermentative hydrogen-producing strain was isolated from crude glycerol contaminated soil and identified as Klebsiella pneumoniae on the basis of the 16S rRNA gene analysis as well as physiological and biochemical characteristics. The selected strain, designated as K. pneumoniae TR17, gave good hydrogen production from crude glycerol. Culture conditions influencing the hydrogen production were investigated. The strain produced hydrogen within a wide range of temperature (30–50 °C), initial pH (4.0–9.0) and crude glycerol concentration (20–100 g/L) with yeast extract as a favorable nitrogen source. In batch cultivation, the optimal conditions for hydrogen production were: cultivation temperature at 40 °C, initial pH at 8.0, 20 g/L crude glycerol and 2 g/L yeast extract. This resulted in the maximum cumulative hydrogen production of 27.7 mmol H2/L and hydrogen yield of 0.25 mol H2/mol glycerol. In addition, the main soluble metabolites were 1,3-propanediol, 2,3-butanediol and ethanol corresponding to the production of 3.52, 2.06 and 3.95 g/L, respectively.  相似文献   

15.
The hydrogen-producing strain PROH2 pertaining to the genus Clostridium was successfully isolated from a shallow submarine hydrothermal chimney (Prony Bay, New Caledonia) driven by serpentinization processes. Cell biomass and hydrogen production performances during fermentation by strain PROH2 were studied in a series of batch experiments under various conditions of pH, temperature, NaCl and glucose concentrations. The highest hydrogen yield, 2.71 mol H2/mol glucose, was observed at initial pH 9.5, 37 °C, and glucose concentration 2 g/L, and was comparable to that reported for neutrophilic clostridial species. Hydrogen production by strain PROH2 reached the maximum production rate (0.55 mM-H2/h) at the late exponential phase. Yeast extract was required for growth of strain PROH2 and improved significantly its hydrogen production performances. The isolate could utilize various energy sources including cellobiose, galactose, glucose, maltose, sucrose and trehalose to produce hydrogen. The pattern of end-products of metabolism was also affected by the type of energy sources and culture conditions used. These results indicate that Clostridium sp. strain PROH2 is a good candidate for producing hydrogen under alkaline and mesothermic conditions.  相似文献   

16.
This study investigates the mesophilic biohydrogen production from glucose using a strictly anaerobic strain, Clostridium butyricum CWBI1009, immobilized in a trickling bed sequenced batch reactor (TBSBR) packed with a Lantec HD Q-PAC® packing material (132 ft2/ft3 specific surface). The reactor was operated for 62 days. The main parameters measured here were hydrogen composition, hydrogen production rate and soluble metabolic products. pH, temperature, recirculation flow rate and inlet glucose concentration at 10 g/L were the controlled parameters. The maximum specific hydrogen production rate and the hydrogen yield found from this study were 146 mmol H2/L.d and 1.67 mol H2/mol glucose. The maximum hydrogen composition was 83%. Following a thermal treatment, the culture was active without adding fresh inoculum in the subsequent feeding and both the hydrogen yield and the hydrogen production rate were improved. For all sequences, the soluble metabolites were dominated by the presence of butyric and acetic acids compared to other volatile fatty acids. The results from the standard biohydrogen production (BHP) test which was conducted using samples from TBSBR as inoculum confirmed that the culture generated more biogas and hydrogen compared to the pure strain of C. butyricum CWBI1009. The effect of biofilm activity was studied by completely removing (100%) the mixed liquid and by adding fresh medium with glucose. For three subsequent sequences, similar results were recorded as in the previous sequences with 40% removal of spent medium. The TBSBR biofilm density varied from top to bottom in the packing bed and the highest biofilm density was found at the bottom plates. Moreover, no clogging was evidenced in this packing material, which is characterized by a relatively high specific surface area. Following a PCA test, contaminants of the Bacillus genus were isolated and a standard BHP test was conducted, resulting in no hydrogen production.  相似文献   

17.
Rhodobacter capsulatus is purple non-sulfur (PNS) bacterium which can produce hydrogen and CO2 by utilizing volatile organic acids in presence of light under anaerobic conditions. Photofermentation by PNS bacteria is strongly affected by temperature and light intensity. In the present study we present the kinetic analysis of growth, hydrogen production, and dual consumption of acetic acid and lactic acid at different temperatures (20, 30 and 38 °C) and light intensities (1500, 2000, 3000, 4000 and 5000 lux). The cell growth data fitted well to the logistic model and the cumulative hydrogen production data fitted well to the Modified Gompertz Model. The model parameters were affected by temperature and light intensity. Lactic acid was found to be consumed by first order kinetics. Rate of consumption of acetic acid was zero order until most of the lactic acid was consumed, and then it shifted to first order. The results revealed that the optimum light intensities for maximum hydrogen production were 5000 lux for 20 °C and 3000 lux for 30 °C and 38 °C.  相似文献   

18.
A few studies have been made on fermentative hydrogen production from marine algae, despite of their advantages compared with other biomass substrates. In this study, fermentative hydrogen production from Laminaria japonica (one brown algae species) was investigated under mesophilic condition (35 ± 1 °C) without any pretreatment method. A feasibility test was first conducted through a series of batch cultivations, and 0.92 mol H2/mol hexoseadded, or 71.4 ml H2/g TS of hydrogen yield was achieved at a substrate concentration of 20 g COD/L (based on carbohydrate), initial pH of 7.5, and cultivation pH of 5.5. Continuous operation for a period of 80 days was then carried out using anaerobic sequencing batch reactor (ASBR) with a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 6 days. After operation for approximately 30 days, a stable hydrogen yield of 0.79 ± 0.03 mol H2/mol hexoseadded was obtained. To optimize bioenergy recovery from L. japonica, an up-flow anaerobic sludge blanket reactor (UASBr) was applied to treat hydrogen fermentation effluent (HFE) for methane production. A maximum methane yield of 309 ± 12 ml CH4/g COD was achieved during the 90 days operation period, where the organic loading rate (OLR) was 3.5 g COD/L/d.  相似文献   

19.
The production of hydrogen from soft-drink wastewater in two upflow anaerobic packed-bed reactors was evaluated. The results show that soft-drink wastewater is a good source for hydrogen generation. Data from both reactors indicate that the reactor without medium containing macro- and micronutrients (R2) provided a higher hydrogen yield (3.5 mol H2 mol−1 of sucrose) as compared to the reactor (R1) with a nutrient-containing medium (3.3 mol H2 mol−1 of sucrose). Reactor R2 continuously produced hydrogen, whereas reactor R1 exhibited a short period of production and produced lower amounts of hydrogen. Better hydrogen production rates and percentages of biogas were also observed for reactor R2, which produced 0.4 L h−1 L−1 and 15.8% of H2, compared to reactor R1, which produced 0.2 L h−1 L−1 and 2.6% of H2. The difference in performance between the reactors was likely due to changes in the metabolic pathway for hydrogen production and decreases in bed porosity as a result of excessive biomass growth in reactor R1. Molecular biological analyses of samples from reactors R1 and R2 indicated the presence of several microorganisms, including Clostridium (91% similarity), Enterobacter (93% similarity) and Klebsiella (97% similarity).  相似文献   

20.
In view of increasing attempts for the production of renewable energy, the production of biohydrogen energy by a new mesophilic bacterium Clostridium sp. YM1 was performed for the first time in the dark fermentation. Experimental results showed that the fermentative hydrogen was successfully produced by Clostridium sp. YM1 with the highest cumulative hydrogen volume of 3821 ml/L with a hydrogen yield of 1.7 mol H2/mol glucose consumed. Similar results revealed that optimum incubation temperature and pH value of culture medium were 37 °C and 6.5, respectively. The study of hydrogen production from glucose and xylose revealed that this strain was able to generate higher hydrogen from glucose compared to that from xylose. The profile of volatile fatty acids produced showed that hydrogen generation by Clostridium sp. YM1 was butyrate-type fermentation. Moreover, the findings of this study indicated that an increase in head space of fermentation culture positively enhanced hydrogen production.  相似文献   

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