Abstract

Abstract Hydrogen gas production from sugar solution derived from acid hydrolysis of ground wheat starch by photo-fermentation was investigated. Three different pure strains of Rhodobacter sphaeroides (RV, NRLL and DSZM) were used in batch experiments to select the most suitable strain. The ground wheat was hydrolyzed in acid solution at pH = 3 and 90 °C in an autoclave for 15 min. The resulting sugar solution was used for hydrogen production by photo-fermentation after neutralization and nutrient addition. R. sphaeroides RV resulted in the highest cumulative hydrogen gas formation (178 ml), hydrogen yield (1.23 mol H2 mol−1 glucose) and specific hydrogen production rate (46 ml H2 g−1 biomass h−1) at 5 g l−1 initial total sugar concentration among the other pure cultures. Effects of initial sugar concentration on photo-fermentation performance were investigated by varying sugar concentration between 2.2 and 13 g l−1 using the pure culture of R. sphaeroides RV. Cumulative hydrogen volume increased from 30 to 232 ml when total sugar concentration was increased from 2.2 to 8.5 g l−1. Further increases in initial sugar concentration resulted in decreases in cumulative hydrogen formation. The highest hydrogen formation rate (3.69 ml h−1) and yield (1.23 mol H2 mol−1 glucose) were obtained at a sugar concentration of 5 g l−1.

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