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Title Production of biohythane from cow dung using novel microbial synthetic consortia designed by heat-treated and acclimatized combined wastes
ID_Doc 15288
Authors Ira, R; Sharma, V; Kumar, S; Koul, M; Sharma, L; Halder, A; Prakash, T
Title Production of biohythane from cow dung using novel microbial synthetic consortia designed by heat-treated and acclimatized combined wastes
Year 2024
Published Environmental Science-Advances, 3, 9
Abstract The world's increasing dependency on fossil fuels has become a significant energy and environmental concern as they contribute 83% of the global energy supply and produce large amounts of carbon dioxide. Biohythane, a blend of biomethane (5-10%) and biohydrogen (50-60%), is emerging as a promising and environmentally friendly alternative fuel derived from organic wastes and offers a sustainable solution. The existing methods of biohythane production suffer from major limitations of being cost- and labor-intensive due to adopting bulk substrate pretreatment to enhance biohythane yield thereby limiting their industrial applications. In this study, we have developed a synthetic microbial consortium (E(C2)Tx) for anaerobic digestion by combining various organic wastes and subjecting them to heat pre-treatment and acclimatization to enrich biohydrogen producers and methanogens, respectively. Raw cow dung was anaerobically digested as the substrate with E(C2)Tx and this resulted in the production of biohythane with 3% biohydrogen and 36% biomethane. The consortia designing strategy avoided any bulk substrate pretreatment and only included the pretreatment of the inoculum which is used in four times less volume than the substrate. A 16S rRNA gene based metagenomic analysis revealed that the CD samples treated with E(C2)Tx were enriched in cellulolytic and hydrogen-producing Firmicutes, along with methylotrophic and hydrogenotrophic methanogens. The developed technology offers promising commercial benefits by requiring less energy for biohythane production. In addition, it offers environmental advantages by providing an efficient CD waste management alternative and reducing climatic impact by lowering greenhouse gas emissions associated with fossil fuel burning. Using a waste complementarity approach for consortia designing aligns with the principles of circular economy and presents a sustainable, scalable energy solution. The developed method can support the growing energy market by increasing biohythane yield and lowering its production cost. Transforming waste into wealth: an organic waste-based, newly designed microbial consortium converts cow dung into biohythane through anaerobic digestion, promoting sustainable energy and resource recovery.
PDF https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlepdf/2024/va/d4va00107a

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