Abstract
Biogas produced from anaerobic digestion usually contains impurities, particularly with a high content of CO2 (15-60%), thus decreasing its caloric value and limiting its application as an energy source. H2-driven biogas upgrading using homoacetogens is a promising approach for upgrading biogas to biomethane and converting CO2 to acetate simultaneously. Herein, we developed a novel membrane biofilm reactor (MBfR) with H2 and biogas separately supplied via bubbleless hollow fiber membranes. The gas-permeable hollow fibers of the MBfR enabled high H2 and CO2 utilization efficiencies (∼98% and ∼97%, respectively) and achieved concurrent biomethane (∼94%) and acetate (∼450 mg/L/d) production. High-throughput 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing suggested that enriched microbial communities were dominated by Acetobacterium (38-48% relative abundance). In addition, reverse transcription quantitative PCR of the functional marker gene formyltetrahydrofolate synthetase showed that its expression level increased with increasing H2 and CO2 utilization efficiencies. These results indicate that Acetobacterium plays a key role in CO2 to acetate conversion. These findings are expected to facilitate energy-positive wastewater treatment and contribute to the development of a new solution to biogas upgrading.
Published Version
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