Abstract

BackgroundNowadays, the vast majority of chemicals are either synthesised from fossil fuels or are extracted from agricultural commodities. However, these production approaches are not environmentally and economically sustainable, as they result in the emission of greenhouse gases and they may also compete with food production. Because of the global agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, there is an urgent interest in developing alternative sustainable sources of chemicals. In recent years, organic waste streams have been investigated as attractive and sustainable feedstock alternatives. In particular, attention has recently focused on the production of caproate from mixed culture fermentation of low-grade organic residues. The current approaches for caproate synthesis from organic waste are not economically attractive, as they involve the use of two-stage anaerobic digestion systems and the supplementation of external electron donors, both of which increase its production costs. This study investigates the feasibility of producing caproate from food waste (FW) without the supplementation of external electron donors using a single-phase reactor system.ResultsReplicate leach-bed reactors were operated on a semi-continuous mode at organic loading of 80 g VS FW l−1 and at solid retention times of 14 and 7 days. Fermentation, rather than hydrolysis, was the limiting step for caproate production. A higher caproate production yield 21.86 ± 0.57 g COD l−1 was achieved by diluting the inoculating leachate at the beginning of each run and by applying a leachate recirculation regime. The mixed culture batch fermentation of the FW leachate was able to generate 23 g caproate COD l−1 (10 g caproate l−1), at a maximum rate of 3 g caproate l−1 day−1 under high H2 pressure. Lactate served as the electron donor and carbon source for the synthesis of caproate. Microbial community analysis suggested that neither Clostridium kluyveri nor Megasphaera elsdenii, which are well-characterised caproate producers in bioreactors systems, were strongly implicated in the synthesis of caproate, but that rather Clostridium sp. with 99% similarity to Ruminococcaceae bacterium CPB6 and Clostridium sp. MT1 likely played key roles in the synthesis of caproate. This finding indicates that the microbial community capable of caproate synthesis could be diverse and may therefore help in maintaining a stable and robust process.ConclusionsThese results indicate that future, full-scale, high-rate caproate production from carbohydrate-rich wastes, associated with biogas recovery, could be envisaged.

Highlights

  • Nowadays, the vast majority of chemicals are either synthesised from fossil fuels or are extracted from agricultural commodities

  • In this study, for the first time, we demonstrated the feasibility of stabilising food waste (FW), while at the same time producing caproate as one of the highest fermentation products in a one-stage reactor system without the supplementation of external electron donors

  • Parameters including leach-bed reactor configuration and frequent leachate recirculation contributed to creating favourable conditions for the hydrolysis of FW which occurred within 2 days

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Summary

Introduction

The vast majority of chemicals are either synthesised from fossil fuels or are extracted from agricultural commodities These production approaches are not environmentally and economically sustainable, as they result in the emission of greenhouse gases and they may compete with food production. One of the most widely reported reasons for process instability in anaerobic digesters is reactor acidification, which occurs due to the accumulation of carboxylates. These carboxylates are valuable chemicals in their own right and are more likely to be produced at high concentrations from waste with high organic content, such as FW. The large-scale production of alternative valuable by-products (carboxylates) represents a new opportunity for AD technology

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