Dark fermentation of acid hydrolyzed ground wheat starch for bio-hydrogen production by periodic feeding and effluent removal was investigated at different feeding intervals. Ground wheat was acid hydrolyzed at pH ΒΌ 3 and T ΒΌ 121 C for 30 min using an autoclave. The resulting sugar solution was su
Photo-fermentative hydrogen gas production from dark fermentation effluent of acid hydrolyzed wheat starch with periodic feeding
β Scribed by Rana Sagnak; Fikret Kargi
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 378 KB
- Volume
- 36
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0360-3199
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β¦ Synopsis
Hydrogen gas production by photo-fermentation of dark fermentation effluent of acid hydrolyzed wheat starch was investigated at different hydraulic residence times (HRT ΒΌ 1e10 days). Pure Rhodobacter sphaeroides (NRRL B-1727) culture was used in continuous photo-fermentation by periodic feeding and effluent removal. The highest daily hydrogen gas production (85 ml d Γ1 ) was obtained at HRT ΒΌ 4 days (96 h) while the highest hydrogen yield (1200 ml H 2 g Γ1 TVFA) was realized at HRT ΒΌ 196 h. Specific and volumetric hydrogen formation rates were also the highest at HRT ΒΌ 96 h. Steady-state biomass concentrations and biomass yields increased with increasing HRT. TVFA loading rates of 0.32 g L Γ1 d Γ1 and 0.51 g L Γ1 d Γ1 resulted in the highest hydrogen yield and formation rate, respectively. Hydrogen gas yield obtained in this study compares favorably with the relevant literature reports probably due to operation by periodic feeding and effluent removal.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Batch dark fermentation experiments were performed to investigate the effects of biomass and substrate concentration on bio-hydrogen production from acid hydrolyzed ground wheat at 55 C. In the first set of experiments, the substrate concentration was constant at 20 g total sugar L Γ1 and biomass co
Dark fermentation experiments were performed for bio-hydrogen production from ground wheat starch solution (10 AE 1 g l Γ1 ) using periodic feeding and effluent removal. A mixed culture of Clostridium butyricum-NRRL 1024 and Clostridium pasteurianum-NRRL B-598 were used with an initial biomass ratio