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Dive into the research topics where Kyungjin Cho is active.

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Featured researches published by Kyungjin Cho.


Bioresource Technology | 2011

Acclimation and activity of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria with respect to variations in zinc concentration, temperature, and microbial population

Seungyong Lee; Kyungjin Cho; Woong Kim; Seokhwan Hwang

Activity of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) to simultaneous variation in Zn(2+) concentration (0.01-3.5mg/L), temperature (23-33°C), and AOB concentration (3-30 × 10(6)gene copies/mL) in a steel industry wastewater treatment plant was evaluated. Two equations were developed to describe the lag period (i.e., AOB acclimation) and ammonia oxidation rate (i.e., growth of the AOB) depending on the variables. AOB concentration and temperature both had significant effects on lag period and the ammonia oxidation rate. Zn(2+) concentration only had a significant effect on ammonia oxidation rate at 5% α-level. There was a significant interaction between AOB concentration and temperature for both lag period and ammonia oxidation rate. The effects of the variables were not significant when AOB concentration was higher than 2.0 × 10(7)copies/mL. There was no visible shift or changes in AOB communities based on DGGE analysis with amoA gene primers.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2015

The biostimulation of anaerobic digestion with (semi)conductive ferric oxides: their potential for enhanced biomethanation

Gahyun Baek; Jaai Kim; Kyungjin Cho; Hyokwan Bae; Changsoo Lee

The effect of biostimulation with ferric oxides, semiconductive ferric oxyhydroxide, and conductive magnetite on the anaerobic digestion of dairy wastewater was examined in a batch mode. The reactors supplemented with ferric oxyhydroxide (R2) and magnetite (R3) showed significantly enhanced biomethanation performance compared with the control (R1). The removal of chemical oxygen demand (COD) after 30xa0days was 31.9, 59.3, and 82.5xa0% in R1, R2, and R3, respectively. The consumed COD was almost fully recovered as biogas in R2 and R3, while only 79xa0% was recovered in R1. The total energy production as biogas was accordingly 32.2, 71.0, and 97.7xa0kJ in R1, R2, and R3, respectively. The reactors also differed in the acid formation profile with more propionate and butyrate found in R1 and more acetate found in R3. The enhanced biomethanation seems to be associated with variations in the bacterial community structure supposedly induced by the ferric oxides added. In contrast, no evident variation was observed in the archaeal community structure among the reactors. The potential electric syntrophy formed between Methanosaeta concilii-like methanogens and electroactive iron-reducing bacteria, particularly Trichococcus, was likely responsible for the enhanced performance. The stimulated growth of fermentative iron reducers may also have contributed by altering the metabolic characteristics of the bacterial communities to produce more favorable acidogenic products for methanogenesis. The overall results suggest the potential of biostimulation with (semi)conductive ferric oxides to enhance the rate and efficiency of the biomethanation of organic wastes. This seems to be potentially attractive, as increasing attention is being paid to the energy self-sufficiency of waste/wastewater treatment processes today.


Bioresource Technology | 2013

Comparison of methanogenic community structure and anaerobic process performance treating swine wastewater between pilot and optimized lab scale bioreactors

Woong Kim; Kyungjin Cho; Seungyong Lee; Seokhwan Hwang

To investigate methanogenic community structure and process performance of anaerobic digestion treating swine wastewater at different scale, a pilot plant with 20 m(3) of effective working volume and lab scale methanogenic digester with 6L working volume were operated for 71 days and 6 turnover periods, respectively. During the steady state of anaerobic digestion, COD and VS removal efficiency in pilot plant were 65.3±3.2, 51.6±4.3%, respectively, which was similar to those in lab scale. However, calculated VFAs removal efficiency and methane yield were lower in pilot plant than in lab scale digester. Also, organics removal efficiencies, which consist of total carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids, were different between pilot and lab scale. These results were thought to be due to the ratio of carbohydrates to proteins in the raw swine wastewater. As a result of qualitative microbial analysis, Methanoculleus receptaculii, and Methanoculleus bourgensis, were commonly concerned with methane production.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2012

Performance of methanogenic reactors in temperature phased two-stage anaerobic digestion of swine wastewater

Woong Kim; Seung Gu Shin; Kyungjin Cho; Changsoo Lee; Seokhwan Hwang

The present study investigated the shifts in the chemical profiles of a two-phase anaerobic digestion system in methanogenic and acidogenic reactors for the treatment of swine wastewater. Acidogenic and methanogenic digesters were used with overall HRTs ranging from 27 to 6 d. In the optimized thermophilic/acidogenic phase throughout the entire experimental period, VS was reduced by 13.8% (1.6%); however, COD hardly decreased because of the thermophilic hydrolysis of organic materials, such as carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids, without any significant consumption of volatile fatty acids. In the methanogenic/mesophilic phase, COD was reduced by 65.8 (1.1)% compared to a 47.4 (2.9)% reduction in VS reduction efficiency with the gradual increase in methane production during a methanogenic HRT between 25 and 10 d. A high protein degradation rate was observed in the optimized acidogenic phase, which is assumed to be due to the low content of carbohydrates in raw swine wastewater as well as the readily thermophilic hydrolysis of proteins. Two-phase systems of anaerobic digestion consisting of optimized thermophilic and mesophilic methanogenic digesters showed a stable performance with respect to VS reduction efficiency with OLRs less than 3 g VS/L·d, in other words, more than 10 days of methanogenic HRT in this study.


Bioresource Technology | 2015

Characterization of food waste-recycling wastewater as biogas feedstock.

Seung Gu Shin; Gyuseong Han; Joonyeob Lee; Kyungjin Cho; Eun-Jeong Jeon; Changsoo Lee; Seokhwan Hwang

A set of experiments was carried out to characterize food waste-recycling wastewater (FRW) and to investigate annual and seasonal variations in composition, which is related to the process operation in different seasons. Year-round samplings (n=31) showed that FRW contained high chemical oxygen demand (COD; 148.7±30.5g/L) with carbohydrate (15.6%), protein (19.9%), lipid (41.6%), ethanol (14.0%), and volatile fatty acids (VFAs; 4.2%) as major constituents. FRW was partly (62%) solubilized, possibly due to partial fermentation of organics including carbohydrate. Biodegradable portions of carbohydrate and protein were estimated from acidogenesis test by first-order kinetics: 72.9±4.6% and 37.7±0.3%, respectively. A maximum of 50% of the initial organics were converted to three major VFAs, which were acetate, propionate, and butyrate. The methane potential was estimated as 0.562L CH4/g VSfeed, accounting for 90.0% of the theoretical maximum estimated by elemental analysis.


Bioresource Technology | 2016

Correlations between bacterial populations and process parameters in four full-scale anaerobic digesters treating sewage sludge.

Seung Gu Shin; Taewoan Koo; Joonyeob Lee; Gyuseong Han; Kyungjin Cho; Woong Kim; Seokhwan Hwang

Process parameters and bacterial populations were investigated in four full-scale anaerobic digesters treating sewage sludge. Although the four digesters were operated under similar conditions, digesters A and B had higher pH (7.2-7.4) and lipid removal efficiencies (>50%) than C and D (pH 6.1-6.4; average lipid removal <16%). Bacterial richness, diversity, and evenness were higher in digesters C and D. Among the top-populated genera, ten (group I) were more abundant in digesters A and/or B; they were putative syntrophic fatty acid or protein/amino acid-utilizers. In contrast, fifteen others (group II) were less abundant in A and/or B and included potentially dormant/dead cells originated from activated sludge. Despite the overall richness trend, the presence of the 25 genera in groups I/II was greater in digesters A and B (24) than in C and D (17); this observation suggests that group I bacteria might be essential in AD of sewage sludge.


Water Research | 2013

Effects of temperature and pH on the biokinetic properties of thiocyanate biodegradation under autotrophic conditions

Jaai Kim; Kyungjin Cho; Gyuseong Han; Changsoo Lee; Seokhwan Hwang

The simultaneous effects of temperature and pH on the biokinetic properties of thiocyanate biodegradation under mixed-culture, autotrophic conditions were investigated using response surface analysis (RSA) combined with biokinetic modeling. A partial cubic model, based on substrate inhibition biokinetics, was constructed for each kinetic coefficient in Andrew model (i.e., maximum specific growth rate (μ(m)), saturation coefficient (K(S)), and substrate inhibition coefficient (K(SI))). Each model proved statistically reliable to approximate the responses of the kinetic coefficients to temperature and pH changes (r(2) > 0.8, p < 0.05). The response surface plots demonstrated that the biokinetic coefficients change with respect to temperature and pH significantly and in different ways. The model response surfaces were substantially different to each other, indicating distinct correlations between the independent (temperature and pH) and dependent (model response) variables in the models. Based on the estimated response surface models, temperature was shown to have significant effects on all biokinetic coefficients tested. A dominant influence of temperature on μ(m) response was observed while the interdependence of temperature and pH was apparent in the K(S) and K(SI) models. Specific growth rate (μ) versus substrate (i.e., thiocyanate) concentration plots simulating using the obtained response surface models confirmed the significant effects of temperature and pH on the microbial growth rate and therefore on the thiocyanate degradation rate. Overall, the response surface models able to describe the biokinetic effects of temperature and pH on thiocyanate biodegradation within the explored region (20-30 °C and pH 6.0-9.0) were successfully constructed and validated, providing fundamental information for better process control in thiocyanate treatment.


Bioresource Technology | 2017

Identifying methanogen community structures and their correlations with performance parameters in four full-scale anaerobic sludge digesters

Taewoan Koo; Seung Gu Shin; Joonyeob Lee; Gyuseong Han; Woong Kim; Kyungjin Cho; Seokhwan Hwang

Four full-scale mesophilic anaerobic digesters treating waste sludge were monitored to characterize methanogen communities and their relationship with process parameters. The performance of the four digesters were dissimilar with the average chemical oxygen demand removal efficiencies between 24 and 45% and differing pH. Real-time quantitative PCR showed that archaeal 16S rRNA gene concentration ([ARC]) and, more pronouncedly, its ratio to bacterial counterpart ([ARC]/[BAC]) correlated positively with the performance parameters, including the lipid removal efficiency. Pyrosequencing identified 12 methanogen genera, of which Methanolinea, Methansaeta, and Methanospirillum collectively accounted for 79.2% of total archaeal reads. However, Methanoculleus, a numerically minor (1.9±2.6%) taxa, was the most promising biomarker for positive performance, while Methanoregula was abundant in samples with poor performance. These results could be useful for the control and management of anaerobic sludge digestion.


Biodegradation | 2011

Mycelial cultivation of Phellinus linteus using cheese-processing waste and optimization of bioconversion conditions

Changsoo Lee; Seungyong Lee; Kyungjin Cho; Seokhwan Hwang

A medicinal mushroom, Phellinus linteus, was successfully cultivated using a cheese-processing waste, whey, and the optimal bioconversion conditions for the maximum mycelial growth rate was also estimated through solid-state cultivation experiments. Response surface analysis with a face-centered design (center point replicationxa0=xa05) was applied to statistically approximate the simultaneous effects of the three variables, i.e., substrate concentration (10–30xa0gxa0lactose l−1), temperature (20–30°C), and pH (4–6), on the mycelial growth rate of P. linteus. The following is a partial cubic model where η is the mycelial growth rate (Kr) and xk is the corresponding variable term (kxa0=xa0substrate concentration, temperature, and pH in order): ηxa0=xa0−23.8xa0+xa08.67xa0×xa010−2x1xa0+xa01.48x2xa0+xa01.77x3xa0+xa08.00xa0×xa010−4x1x2xa0+xa07.25xa0×xa010−2x1x3xa0+xa05.13xa0×xa010−2x2x3 −1.28xa0×xa010−2x12 –3.18xa0×xa010−2x22. −2.64xa0×xa010−1x32 −3.28xa0×xa010−3x1x2x3xa0+xa04.68xa0×xa010−4x12x2. The produced response surface model proved to be significant (r2xa0>xa00.99, P-valuexa0<0.0001, coefficient of variationxa0<5%) to describe the explored space. Temperature was found to be the most significant factor of dominant effects on the mycelial growth rate, and other variables such as temperature2, pH, pH2, and (substrate concentration2xa0×xa0temperature) also showed significant effects on the model output. The maximum mycelial growth rate was predicted to be 2.80xa0mm d−1 at 29.7xa0g lactose l−1, 26.2°C, and pH 5. Our results proved a good potential of whey to serve as an alternative growth medium for cultivating P. linteus mycelia. This may provide another potential for managing this nutrient-rich waste in a cost-effective way.


Materials & Design | 1997

The effect of silver addition on 7055 Al alloy

C.W Lee; Yun-Chul Chung; Kyungjin Cho; Myung-Chul Shin

Abstract The effect of silver addition on the microstructure and mechanical properties of the 7055 Al alloy was investigated. Mechanical properties of various alloys used in this study are correlated with the formation of constituent particles and microstructural changes of fine precipitates. According to the experiment, tensile strength of the 7055 Al alloy decreased by the addition of silver, although silver additions were observed to refine η′. The low tensile strength is attributed to the relatively low number density of η′ in silver-bearing alloys in which a large amount of hardening elements, such as Zn and Mg, are consumed to form silver-bearing constituent particles.

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Seokhwan Hwang

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Hyokwan Bae

Pusan National University

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Seung Gu Shin

Gyeongnam National University of Science and Technology

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Joonyeob Lee

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Woong Kim

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Gyuseong Han

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Seockheon Lee

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Taewoan Koo

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Dawoon Jeong

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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