Biological production of hydrogen (H2) by dark fermentation is an exciting scientific area for the conversion of low-cost residues and waste into biofuel. The main requirement for an efficient H2 production process is the availability of efficient microbial consortia in which H2-utilizing and non-H2-producing bacteria are suppressed. This study was performed to evaluate the H2 production potentials from the organic fraction of municipal solid waste (OFMSW) with and without addition of inoculum. The results showed that hydrogen productions from OFMSW without addition of inoculum were comparable to those obtained with inoculum but a latency phase of about 6 days occurred. On the contrary, addition of inoculum resulted in higher H2 production potentials without any latency phase. The use of a properly pre-treated inoculum confirmed to be an interesting and improvable tool to obtain high H2 yields from organic waste. However the indigenous OFMSW microbiota showed promising hydrogen yields especially toward the development of efficient hydrogen producing microbial inoculants. EN •H2 production from municipal organic waste is feasible without addition of inoculum.•H2 production obtained without inoculum was comparable to that with inoculum.•Indigenous microbiota showed high hydrogen yields although with a 6 day latency phase.

EFFECTS OF INOCULUM AND INDIGENOUS MICROFLORA ON HYDROGEN PRODUCTION FROM THE ORGANIC FRACTION OF MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE

FAVARO, LORENZO;LAVAGNOLO, MARIA CRISTINA;CASELLA, SERGIO;BASAGLIA, MARINA
2013

Abstract

Biological production of hydrogen (H2) by dark fermentation is an exciting scientific area for the conversion of low-cost residues and waste into biofuel. The main requirement for an efficient H2 production process is the availability of efficient microbial consortia in which H2-utilizing and non-H2-producing bacteria are suppressed. This study was performed to evaluate the H2 production potentials from the organic fraction of municipal solid waste (OFMSW) with and without addition of inoculum. The results showed that hydrogen productions from OFMSW without addition of inoculum were comparable to those obtained with inoculum but a latency phase of about 6 days occurred. On the contrary, addition of inoculum resulted in higher H2 production potentials without any latency phase. The use of a properly pre-treated inoculum confirmed to be an interesting and improvable tool to obtain high H2 yields from organic waste. However the indigenous OFMSW microbiota showed promising hydrogen yields especially toward the development of efficient hydrogen producing microbial inoculants. EN •H2 production from municipal organic waste is feasible without addition of inoculum.•H2 production obtained without inoculum was comparable to that with inoculum.•Indigenous microbiota showed high hydrogen yields although with a 6 day latency phase.
2013
STAMPA
Inglese
38
27
11774
11779
6
Elsevier
Internazionale
anonymous
Environmental Engineering/Energy covers resources concerned with the effects of humans on the environment, and the development of controls to minimize environmental degradation. This category also covers the development, production, use, application, conversion, and management of nonrenewable and renewable energy sources.
The Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology category includes resources on a number of subjects that relate to the exploitation of living organisms or their components. In CC/AB&ES, the emphasis is on applied biology, including industrial microbiology. Applications include industrial chemicals and enzymes, biosensors, bioelectronics, pesticide development, food, flavor and fragrance industry applications, waste treatment, and pollution bioremediation.
Hydrogen; dark fermentation; organic waste; inoculum; indigenous bacteria
reserved
Favaro, Lorenzo; Luca, Alibardi; Lavagnolo, Maria Cristina; Casella, Sergio; Basaglia, Marina
01 CONTRIBUTO IN RIVISTA::01.01 - Articolo in rivista
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
5
262
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/2655852
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