Issue 62, 2015

Bio-augmentative volatile fatty acid production from waste activated sludge hydrolyzed at pH 12

Abstract

Although many pretreatment methods are employed to enhance the hydrolysis of waste activated sludge (WAS), the bioconversion of soluble complex substrates needs improvement to produce higher volatile fatty acids (VFAs). This study isolated a new strain of Citrobacter freundii, which was first used as a VFAs-producing strain under alkaline pH. A bio-augmentative test achieved the highest total production of VFAs (2425.2 mg COD per L) and offered a preferred fermentation method, which yielded more acetic acid (65.0%) than a sludge-only test (50.1%). Moreover, the bio-augmentative test could produce evident synergistic effects on the utilization of soluble complex substrates between WAS and the C. freundii strain. Furthermore, the addition of carbohydrates takes precedence over the adjustment of pH in the production of VFAs, which suggested that the regulation of the ratio of protein to carbohydrates (PN/PS) was more practical and more convenient. Polymerase chain reaction-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE) results revealed that the C. freundii strain was the dominant bacterial community in the bio-augmentative test and some indigenous species were affected due to competition for nutrients with C. freundii.

Graphical abstract: Bio-augmentative volatile fatty acid production from waste activated sludge hydrolyzed at pH 12

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Mar 2015
Accepted
22 May 2015
First published
04 Jun 2015

RSC Adv., 2015,5, 50033-50039

Bio-augmentative volatile fatty acid production from waste activated sludge hydrolyzed at pH 12

X. Yang, L. Wen, X. Liu, S. Chen, Y. Wang and C. Wan, RSC Adv., 2015, 5, 50033 DOI: 10.1039/C5RA04651C

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