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- Title
Biohydrogen Production Through Dark Fermentation by a Microbial Consortium Using Whey Permeate as Substrate.
- Authors
Romão, B.; Batista, F.; Ferreira, J.; Costa, H.; Resende, M.; Cardoso, V.
- Abstract
Nowadays, hydrogen produced globally has been synthesized from fossil fuel with limited source. Therefore, research has been developed in order to explore biological H production by dark fermentation. The purpose of this work was to evaluate the effect of initial pH and ferrous sulfate and ammonium sulfate concentrations on the production of biohydrogen by dark fermentation. The process was carried out in batch mode under anaerobic conditions, in the absence of light, and at standard room temperature and pressure. A microbial consortium provided by the effluent treatment plant of a local dairy company was inoculated into a synthetic medium supplemented with cheese whey permeate (20 g/L of lactose) as a carbon source. The influence of three variables was analyzed by a central composite design 2, and the optimum results of hydrogen yield (4.13 mol H/mol lactose) and productivity (86.31 mmol H/L/day) were achieved at initial pH 7.0 and FeSO and (NH)SO concentrations of 0.6 and 1.5 g/L, respectively. Under these conditions, the kinetic parameters of fermentation were investigated by analyzing the profile of H yield and productivity, metabolite concentrations, pH, and concentration of dissolved iron. In the kinetic analysis, the modified Gompertz equation described adequately the fermentative hydrogen production from cheese whey permeate ( R = 0.98). The profile of ethanol and volatile organic acids showed that lactic acid and butyric acid were the main metabolites produced, and the sum of both by-products corresponded to about 58 % of the total metabolites.
- Subjects
HYDROGEN production; BIOCHEMICAL substrates; FERROUS sulfate; METABOLITES; BUTYRIC acid; LACTIC acid; FERMENTATION
- Publication
Applied Biochemistry & Biotechnology, 2014, Vol 172, Issue 7, p3670
- ISSN
0273-2289
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1007/s12010-014-0778-5