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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of Two-Stage Thermophilic (68°C/55°C) Anaerobic Digestion With One-Stage Thermophilic (55°C) Digestion of Cattle Manure

TLDR
In this article, a two-stage 68 degrees C/55 degrees C anaerobic degradation process for treatment of cattle manure was studied, and the performance of a twostage reactor system was compared with a conventional single-stage reactor running at 55 degrees C with 15-days HRT.
Abstract
A two-stage 68 degrees C/55 degrees C anaerobic degradation process for treatment of cattle manure was studied. In batch experiments, an increase of the specific methane yield, ranging from 24% to 56%, was obtained when cattle manure and its fractions (fibers and liquid) were pretreated at 68 degrees C for periods of 36, 108, and 168 h, and subsequently digested at 55 degrees C. In a lab-scale experiment, the performance of a two-stage reactor system, consisting of a digester operating at 68 degrees C with a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 3 days, connected to a 55 degrees C reactor with 12-day HRT, was compared with a conventional single-stage reactor running at 55 degrees C with 15-days HRT. When an organic loading of 3 g volatile solids (VS) per liter per day was applied, the two-stage setup had a 6% to 8% higher specific methane yield and a 9% more effective VS-removal than the conventional single-stage reactor. The 68 degrees C reactor generated 7% to 9% of the total amount of methane of the two-stage system and maintained a volatile fatty acids (VFA) concentration of 4.0 to 4.4 g acetate per liter. Population size and activity of aceticlastic methanogens, syntrophic bacteria, and hydrolytic/fermentative bacteria were significantly lower in the 68 degrees C reactor than in the 55 degrees C reactors. The density levels of methanogens utilizing H2/CO2 or formate were, however, in the same range for all reactors, although the degradation of these substrates was significantly lower in the 68 degrees C reactor than in the 55 degrees C reactors. Temporal temperature gradient electrophoresis profiles (TTGE) of the 68 degrees C reactor demonstrated a stable bacterial community along with a less divergent community of archaeal species.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Optimisation of the anaerobic digestion of agricultural resources.

TL;DR: Current optimisation techniques associated with anaerobic digestion are reviewed and possible areas where improvements could be made are suggested, including the basic design considerations of a single or multi-stage reactor configuration, the type, power and duration of the mixing regime and the retention of active microbial biomass within the reactor.
Journal ArticleDOI

The roles of acetotrophic and hydrogenotrophic methanogens during anaerobic conversion of biomass to methane: a review

TL;DR: The aim of this paper is primarily to review the recent literature about the occurrence of both acetotrophic and hydrogenotrophic methanogens during anaerobic conversion of particulate biomass to methane (not wastewater treatment), while this review does not cover the activity of the acetate oxidizing bacteria.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biochemical methane potential and biodegradability of complex organic substrates

TL;DR: The results of about 175 individual BMP assays indicate that substrates rich in lipids and easily-degradable carbohydrates yield the highest methane potential, while more recalcitrant substrates with a high lignocellulosic fraction have the lowest.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of thermal and mechanical pretreatments of secondary sludge on biogas production under thermophilic conditions

TL;DR: In this article, the effectiveness of high and low temperature thermal pretreatment, ultrasonic and microwave pretreatments in secondary sludge disintegration has been studied by means of the increment in filterable volatile solids to total volatile subsids ratio (FVS/TVS) respect to untreated sludge.
Journal ArticleDOI

Increasing biogas production by thermal (70 °C) sludge pre-treatment prior to thermophilic anaerobic digestion

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of low temperature pre-treatment on the efficiency of thermophilic anaerobic digestion of primary and secondary waste sludge was investigated, and the results suggest that a short period (9 h) low-temperature pretreatment should be enough to enhance methane production through thermophilicity of sludge.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Profiling of complex microbial populations by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis analysis of polymerase chain reaction-amplified genes coding for 16S rRNA

TL;DR: Analysis of the genomic DNA from a bacterial biofilm grown under aerobic conditions suggests that sulfate-reducing bacteria, despite their anaerobicity, were present in this environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

16S ribosomal DNA amplification for phylogenetic study.

TL;DR: A set of oligonucleotide primers capable of initiating enzymatic amplification (polymerase chain reaction) on a phylogenetically and taxonomically wide range of bacteria is described in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution of bacterioplankton in meromictic Lake Saelenvannet, as determined by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis of PCR-amplified gene fragments coding for 16S rRNA.

TL;DR: The community structure of bacterioplankton in meromictic Lake Saelenvannet was examined by PCR amplification of the V3 region of 16S rRNA from microbial communities recovered from various depths in the water column, and bacterial diversity estimated from the number and intensity of specific fragments in DGGE profiles decreased with depth, while the reverse was true for the Archaea.
Journal ArticleDOI

Remarkable archaeal diversity detected in a Yellowstone National Park hot spring environment

TL;DR: The large number of distinct archaeal sequence types retrieved from this single hot spring was unexpected and demonstrates that Crenarchaeota is a much more diverse group than was previously suspected.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energetics of overall metabolic reactions of thermophilic and hyperthermophilic Archaea and Bacteria

TL;DR: It is shown that values of DeltaGr(0) for many microbially mediated reactions are highly temperature dependent, and that adopting values determined at 25 degrees C for systems at elevated temperatures introduces significant and unnecessary errors.
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