Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1281156 International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 2006 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Our newly developed carrier-induced granular sludge bed (CIGSB) bioreactor was shown to be very effective in hydrogen production. However, since mechanical agitation was not employed to enable sludge granulation, the CIGSB system might encounter problems with poor mass transfer efficiency during prolonged operations. This work was undertaken to improve mixing efficiency of CIGSB for better biomass-substrate contact by adjusting the height to diameter (H/D) ratios of the reactor and by implementing appropriate agitation device. Three H/D ratios (4, 8, and 12) resulting in liquid upflow velocities (vup) of 0.057–1.32 m/h were examined as the CIGSB reactor was carried out at a descending hydraulic retention time (HRT) from 4 to 0.5 h. The results show that decreasing HRT resulted in increases in the H2 production rate, regardless of the H/D ratios. Reactors with a H/D ratio of 8 gave better H2 production performance with a H2 production rate of 6.87 l/h/l and a H2 yield of 3.88 mol H2/mol sucrose, suggesting that the effectiveness of H2 production in the CIGSB system can be enhanced by using a proper vup and physical configuration of the reactor. Supply of additional mechanical agitation for CIGSB reactor (H/D=12) alleviated the phenomena of sludge piston floatation, leading to further increases in the H2 production rate and H2 yield to 9.31 l/h/l and 4.02 mol H2/mol sucrose, respectively. The major soluble metabolite was butyric acid, followed by acetic acid, propionic acid, and ethanol. The former two accounted for nearly 67–76% of total soluble microbial products, indicating the presence of favorable pathways in the CIGSB culture from the aspect of H2-producing metabolism.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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