화학공학소재연구정보센터
Bioresource Technology, Vol.216, 471-477, 2016
Enhanced methane production via repeated batch bioaugmentation pattern of enriched microbial consortia
Using batch and repeated batch cultivations, this study investigated the effects of bioaugmentation with enriched microbial consortia ( named as EMC) on methane production from effluents of hydrogen-producing stage of potato slurry, as well as on the indigenous bacterial community. The results demonstrated that the improved methane production and shift of the indigenous bacterial community structure were dependent on the EMC/sludge ratio and bioaugmentation patterns. The methane yield and production rate in repeated batch bioaugmentation pattern of EMC were, respectively, average 15% and 10% higher than in one-time bioaugmentation pattern of EMC. DNA-sequencing approach showed that the enhanced methane production in the repeated batch bioaugmentation pattern of EMC mainly resulted from the enriched iron-reducing bacteria and the persistence of the introduced Syntrophomonas, which led to a rapid degradation of individual VFAs to methane. The findings contributed to understanding the correlation between the bioaugmentation of microbial consortia, community shift, and methane production. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.