Abstract

To investigate the effect of granular activated carbon (GAC) adsorption and size of microbial aggregates in inoculum on stimulating direct interspecies electron transfer (DIET) during anaerobic digestion of fat, oil, and grease (FOG), seed sludge was divided into two inocula (big (>0.85 mm)/small (0.15–0.85 mm)) for FOG digestion with/without GAC. More long-chain fatty acids (LCFAs) were adsorbed on GAC in the reactor with small aggregates than that with big aggregates, corresponding to 57 % and 10 % decreased methane production, respectively. Adsorption of unsaturated LCFAs (e.g., oleic acid) on GAC was found to reduce LCFA bioavailability, hinder DIET via GAC, and change community structure. Compared to pre-adsorption of oleic acid on GAC, pre-attachment of microbes on GAC resulted in 5.6-fold higher methane yield for oleic acid digestion. Together, competition of LCFA adsorption between GAC and microbial aggregates is essential for enhanced methane recovery from FOG digestion via GAC-induced DIET.

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