Abstract

This work targeted the energy recovery from food waste (FW), aiming at the implementation of a potentially participative process of FW conditioning before the non-sterile biological conversion to hydrogen (H2). Food waste conversion was initially performed under sterile conditions, achieving a maximum H2 productivity of 249.5 ± 24.6 mL H2 (L h)−1 and a total H2 production to 4.1 ± 0.2 L L−1. The non-sterile operation was implemented as a way of process simplification, but the total H2 production decreased by 59% due to the FW native microorganisms. To counteract this effect, FW was submitted to acid, microwave (MW), and combined acid and MW pretreatment. The application of 4 min MW, 550 W, efficiently controlled the FW microbial counts. The Clostridium butyricum bioaugmented conversion of MW-pretreated FW accelerated the H2 production to 406.2 ± 8.1 mL (L h)−1 and peaked the total H2 production and conversion yield to 4.6 ± 0.5 L L−1 and 234.6 ± 55.6 mL (g sugar)−1, respectively. These results exceeded in 63, 12 and 4%, respectively, the H2 productivity, total production and sugar conversion yield obtained under sterile conditions, and are encouraging for the future implementation of increasingly responsible waste valorisation practices.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call