화학공학소재연구정보센터
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.101, No.6, 2619-2627, 2017
Enhancement of acetate productivity in a thermophilic (55 A degrees C) hollow-fiber membrane biofilm reactor with mixed culture syngas (H-2/CO2) fermentation
Conversion of organic wastes to syngas is an attractive way to utilize wastes. The produced syngas can be further used to produce a variety of chemicals. In this study, a hollow-fiber membrane biofilm reactor with mix cultures was operated at 55 A degrees C to convert syngas (H-2/CO2) into acetate. A high concentration of acetate (42.4 g/L) was reached in batch experiment while a maximum acetate production rate of 10.5 g/L/day was achieved in the continuous-flow mode at hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 1 day. Acetate was the main product in both batch and continuous-flow experiments. n-Butyrate was the other byproduct in the reactor. Acetate accounted for more than 98.5 and 99.1% of total volatile fatty acids in batch and continuous modes, respectively. Illumina Miseq high-throughput sequencing results showed that microorganisms were highly purified and enriched in the reactor. The main genus was Thermoanaerobacterium (66% of relative abundance), which was usually considered as H-2 producer in the literature, however, likely played a role as a H-2 consumer in this study. This study provides a new method to generate the high producing rate and purity of acetate from syngas.