Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7074244 | Bioresource Technology | 2015 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Fermentative hydrogen from seaweed is a potential biofuel of the future. Mannitol, which is a typical carbohydrate component of seaweed, was used as a substrate for hydrogen fermentation. The theoretical specific hydrogen yield (SHY) of mannitol was calculated as 5Â mol H2/mol mannitol (615.4Â mL H2/g mannitol) for acetic acid pathway, 3Â mol H2/mol mannitol (369.2Â mL H2/g mannitol) for butyric acid pathway and 1Â mol H2/mol mannitol (123.1Â mL H2/g mannitol) for lactic acid and ethanol pathways. An optimal SHY of 1.82Â mol H2/mol mannitol (224.2Â mL H2/g mannitol) was obtained by heat pre-treated anaerobic digestion sludge under an initial pH of 8.0, NH4Cl concentration of 25Â mM, NaCl concentration of 50Â mM and mannitol concentration of 10Â g/L. The overall energy conversion efficiency achieved was 96.1%. The energy was contained in the end products, hydrogen (17.2%), butyric acid (38.3%) and ethanol (34.2%).
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Process Chemistry and Technology
Authors
Ao Xia, Amita Jacob, Christiane Herrmann, Muhammad Rizwan Tabassum, Jerry D. Murphy,