Fermentative Bio-Hydrogen Production of Food Waste in the Presence of Different Concentrations of Salt (Na+) and Nitrogen
Author(s) -
Pul-Eip Lee,
Yuhoon Hwang,
Tae-Jin Lee
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of microbiology and biotechnology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.601
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1738-8872
pISSN - 1017-7825
DOI - 10.4014/jmb.1808.08023
Subject(s) - biohydrogen , hydrogen production , chemistry , ammonia , food science , fermentative hydrogen production , fermentation , food waste , hydrogen , salt (chemistry) , nitrogen , clostridium butyricum , ammonia production , dark fermentation , biochemistry , biology , organic chemistry , ecology
Fermentation of food waste in the presence of different concentrations of salt (Na + ) and ammonia was conducted to investigate the interrelation of Na + and ammonia content in biohydrogen production. Analysis of the experimental results showed that peak hydrogen production differed according to the ammonia and Na + concentration. The peak hydrogen production levels achieved were (97.60, 91.94, and 49.31) ml/g COD at (291.41, 768.75, and 1,037.89) mg-N/L of ammonia and (600, 1,000, and 4,000) mg-Na + /L of salt concentration, respectively. At peak hydrogen production, the ammonia concentration increased along with increasing salt concentration in the medium. This means that for peak hydrogen production, the C/N ratio decreased with increasing salt content in the medium. The butyrate/acetate (B/A) ratio was higher in proportion to the bio-hydrogen production (r-square: 0.71, p -value: 0.0006). Different concentrations of Na + and ammonia in the medium also produced diverse microbial communities. Klebsiella sp., Enterobacter sp., and Clostridium sp. were predominant with high bio-hydrogen production, while Lactococcus sp. was found with low bio-hydrogen production.
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