Abstract

The removal of organic matter from a coastal mud sediment was carried out by a methane fermentation process under anaerobic conditions. In a batch acidogenic fermentation, the addition of vitamins containing thiamine, nicotinic acid and biotin dramatically enhanced acetate production from the mud sediment (200 g wet wt l(-1) artificial sea water), yielding 77 mM acetate after 6 days, which corresponded to 77% of the organic matter in the mud sediment, measured on the basis of chemical oxygen demand. Thereafter, the two-fold diluted, post-acidogenic fermentation liquor (PAF liquor) was continuously treated at 2.4x original dilution rate day(-1) for 30 days, using an upflow anaerobic sludge blanket methanogenic reactor containing the acclimated methanogenic sludge from the mud sediment. Acetate, 42 mM in the PAF liquor, was converted to methane at a maximum methane production rate of 96 mmol l(-1) day(-1); and 87.5% of the acetate and 88.7% of the total organic carbon in the PAF liquor were removed. Moreover, an efficient treatment of the mud sediment was carried out by a semi-continuous, two-stage reactor system, where the culture broth was circulated between acidogenic and methanogenic reactors. This two-stage reactor system gave a stable operation at 4-day intervals for one treatment period, yielding 112 mmol methane from the wet mud in the PAF liquor (278 g l(-1)).

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