Abstract

Hydrogen (H2), a possible future clean energy carrier, requires process-based improvement routes for cutting down the production cost. The impact of nitrogen (N2) sparging on H2 production during co-culture system of Enterobacter aerogenes and Clostridium butyricum from crude glycerol (CG) was studied to reduce the overall process cost. H2 production using 1% CG under nitrogen sparged medium before autoclaving resulted in 1.2 mmol-H2/mol of glycerol in comparison to 1.5 mmol-H2/mol of glycerol without sparging. In the presence of air ranging from 5 mL to 75 mL in the headspace volume, H2 production increased to a maximum of 26.14 mmol/L with 1.4 g/L of ethanol production. The concentration of 1,3-propanediol with N2 sparging was around 3.0 g/L and decreased to 0.5 g/L due to presence of 75 mL of air in the headspace. This observation can be attributed to a shift from reductive to oxidative metabolism of glycerol. A process-based improvement strategy to optimize H2 formation resulted in metabolic pathway shift from reductive to oxidative with increase in H2 production. Synergistic influence of co-culture system in absence of expensive reducing agent and without nitrogen sparging step can offer a better process-based economic strategy for H2 production, minimize the metabolite production and increase field-scale application of biodiesel plant.

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