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  4. Efficacious enrichment of butyrate-oxidizing exoelectrogens upgrades energy recovery in relevant bioelectrochemical systems
 
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Efficacious enrichment of butyrate-oxidizing exoelectrogens upgrades energy recovery in relevant bioelectrochemical systems

Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.13661
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2024-11-01
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Elreedy, Ahmed  
Technische Mikrobiologie V-7  
Härrer, Daniel  
Ali, Rowayda  
Hille-Reichel, Andrea  
Gescher, Johannes  
Technische Mikrobiologie V-7  
TORE-DOI
10.15480/882.13661
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/51836
Journal
Environmental technology & innovation  
Volume
36
Article Number
103871
Citation
Environmental Technology and Innovation 36: 103871 (2024)
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.eti.2024.103871
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85207756018
Publisher
Elsevier
Energy recovery via bioelectrochemical systems (BESs) while treating organic wastes has proven to be a promising technology. Organic waste hydrolysates are appealing feedstocks for BESs due to their richness in short-chain fatty acids rather than complex organics. However, butyrate, among the abundant acids in hydrolysates, has been found to particularly hinder the efficiency of BESs. The lack of efficient anodic butyrate-oxidizers appears to be critical; therefore, this study targeted the enrichment of an anodic community to enhance butyrate oxidation efficiency in BESs. We initially tested three different inoculum sources using butyrate as the sole electron donor. Then, through successive transfers of a bioanode piece to fresh anodes, significant improvement in coulombic efficiency (CE) from 9.4 % to 78.6 % was achieved over six transfers. The enriched bioanode was dominated by the bacterial genera Geobacter (72 %) and Sporomusa (16 %), which correlated positively with CE development over transfers. The metagenomic/transcriptomic analyses confirmed the key role of Geobacter in the anodic oxidation of butyrate, while Sporomusa likely displayed a syntrophic interaction, assimilating acetate from CO2 and excess H2. The enriched culture was further bioaugmented with Geobacter sulfurreducens and tested with real butyrate-containing hydrolysate, in which CE and maximum current density of 86.9 % and ∼3.5 A/m2 were achieved, respectively. Overall, the enriched butyrate-oxidizing culture, bioaugmented with G. sulfurreducens, proves efficient for BESs treating butyrate-rich waste-streams.
Subjects
Anodic biofilm
Butyrate kinase
Coulombic efficiency
Geobacter
Hydrolysate treatment
Microbial electrolysis cell
DDC Class
660: Chemistry; Chemical Engineering
570: Life Sciences, Biology
630: Agriculture and Related Technologies
Publication version
publishedVersion
Lizenz
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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