Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1055292 Journal of Environmental Management 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A dominance of type I MB was recorded regardless of CH4 and Cu2+ concentration.•The enrichment at high Cu2+ concentration exhibited three times higher qmax.•Lower CH4 transfer rates favored non-methanotrophic microorganisms.•An enhanced CH4 transfer resulted in higher specific CH4 biodegradation rates.

The environmental conditions during culture enrichment, which ultimately determine its maximum specific biodegradation rate (qmax) and affinity for the target pollutant (Ks), play a key role in the performance of bioreactors devoted to the treatment of methane emissions. This study assessed the influence of Cu2+ and CH4 concentration and the effective CH4 supply rate during culture enrichment on the structure and biodegradation kinetics of methanotrophic communities. The results obtained demonstrated that an increase in Cu2+ concentration from 0.05 to 25 μM increased the qmax and Ks of the communities enriched by a factor of ≈3, even if the Cu2+ concentration did not seem to have an effect on the enzymatic “copper switch” and only pMMO was detected. In addition, high Cu2+ concentrations supported lower diversity coefficients (Hs ≈ 1.5× lower) and apparently promoted the growth of more adapted methanotrophs such as Methylomonas. Despite no clear effect of CH4 concentration on the population structure or on the biodegradation kinetics of the communities enriched was recorded at the two low CH4 concentrations studied (1 and 8%), a higher agitation rate increased the qmax by a factor of ≈2.3 and Ks by a factor of ≈3.1.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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