4.7 Article

Freezing in the presence of nitrite pretreatment enhances hydrogen production from dark fermentation of waste activated sludge

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 248, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2019.119305

Keywords

Waste activated sludge; Dark fermentation; Hydrogen; Nitrite; Freezing treatment

Funding

  1. Hunan Province Innovation Foundation for Postgraduate [CX20190295]
  2. Natural Science Funds of Hunan Province for Distinguished Young Scholar [2018JJ1002]
  3. Science and Technology Major Project of Hunan Province [2018SK1010]
  4. Shanghai Tongji Environmental Science & Technology Development Foundation

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Due to the poor biodegradability of released organics and the rapid consumption of hydrogen, hydrogen production from the untreated waste activated sludge (WAS) and/or inocula is still limited. In this study, it was found that the dark fermentative hydrogen production was largely enhanced fromWAS pretreated by freezing in the presence of nitrite. With an increase of nitrite addition from 100 to 400 mg NO2--N/L during freezing pretreatment (-5 degrees C for 4 h), the maximal hydrogen yield increased from 7.96 to 19.40 mL/g VS (volatile solids), which was 5.5-13.4 times of that in the control (without freezing and nitrite addition). Mechanism explorations revealed that the proposed pretreatment not only accelerated the disintegration of sludge but also promoted the proportion of biodegradable organics released, thereby provided more bio-available substrates for subsequent hydrogen production. Proposed pretreatment severely suppressed the sludge microorganisms responding to homoacetogenesis (-32.1%), methanogenesis (-58.4%), and sulfate-reducing process (-51.5%), inhibited the consumption of hydrogen. Moreover, there was more acetic and butyric (76% versus 57.5%) but less propionic acid (22.6% versus 13.4%) in this pretreated fermenter, which was in correspondence with the theory of fermentation type affecting hydrogen production. Long-term fermentation experiments indicated that the proposed pretreatment boosted the [FeFe]-hydrogenase activities while suppressed the activities of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase, coenzyme F420, and adenylyl sulfate reductase. (c) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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