The Science of the total environment | 2021

Effect of external acetate on lactate-based carboxylate platform: Shifted lactate overloading limit and hydrogen co-production.

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Chain elongation is an anaerobic biotechnological process that converts short chain carboxylates and an electron donor (e.g. ethanol, lactate) into more valuable medium chain carboxylates. Caproate production in lactate-based chain elongation is gaining popularity, however, the relation between lactate (electron donor) and acetate (electron acceptor) has not yet been fully elucidated. Herein, for the first time, the effect of an external acetate on the lactate-based chain elongation in a continuously-fed bioreactor was tested to verify how the external acetate would affect the product spectrum, gas production, as well as stability and efficiency of carboxylates production. Periodic fluctuations in caproate production were observed in bioreactor continuously fed with lactate as a sole carbon source due to the lack of an electron acceptor (acetate) and low chain elongation performance. The recovery of stable caproate production (68.9\xa0±\xa02.2\xa0mmol C/L/d), total lactate consumption, and high hydrogen co-production (748\xa0±\xa076\xa0mLH2/d) was observed as an effect of the addition of an external acetate. The lactate conversion with the external acetate in the second bioreactor ensured stable and dominant caproate production from the beginning of the process. Moreover, despite the continuous lactate overloading in the process with external acetate, stable caproate production was achieved (71.7\xa0±\xa02.4\xa0mmol C/L/d) and previously unobserved hydrogen production occurred (213\xa0±\xa030\xa0mLH2/d). Thus, external electron acceptor addition (i.e. acetate) was proposed as an effective method for stable lactate-based caproate production. Microbiological analysis showed the dominance of microbes closely related to Ruminococcaceae bacterium CPB6 and Acinetobacter throughout the process. Co-occurrence networks based on taxon abundances and process parameters revealed microbial sub-networks responding to lactate concentrations.

Volume 802
Pages \n 149885\n
DOI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.149885
Language English
Journal The Science of the total environment

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