Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
680146 | Bioresource Technology | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The effect of bioaugmentation with an acetate-type fermentation bacterium in the phylum Bacteroidetes on the anaerobic digestion of corn straw was evaluated by batch experiments. Acetobacteroides hydrogenigenes is a promising strain for bioaugmentation with relatively high growth rate, hydrogen yields and acetate tolerance, which ferments a broad spectrum of pentoses, hexoses and polyoses mainly into acetate and hydrogen. During corn straw digestion, bioaugmentation with A. hydrogenigenes led to 19-23% increase of the methane yield, with maximum of 258.1Â mL/g-corn straw achieved by 10% inoculation (control, 209.3Â mL/g-corn straw). Analysis of lignocellulosic composition indicated that A. hydrogenigenes could increase removal rates of cellulose and hemicelluloses in corn straw residue by 12% and 5%, respectively. Further experiment verified that the addition of A. hydrogenigenes could improve the methane yields of methyl cellulose and xylan (models for cellulose and hemicelluloses, respectively) by 16.8% and 7.0%.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Process Chemistry and Technology
Authors
Jie Zhang, Rong-Bo Guo, Yan-Ling Qiu, Jiang-Tao Qiao, Xian-Zheng Yuan, Xiao-Shuang Shi, Chuan-Shui Wang,