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Title Scaling up carboxylic acid production from cheese whey and brewery wastewater via methane-arrested anaerobic digestion
ID_Doc 14140
Authors Wu, HR; Scheve, T; Dalke, R; Holtzapple, M; Urgun-Demirtas, M
Title Scaling up carboxylic acid production from cheese whey and brewery wastewater via methane-arrested anaerobic digestion
Year 2023
Published
DOI 10.1016/j.cej.2022.140080
Abstract In a circular economy, organic waste streams are valuable resources for sustainably producing chemicals and fuels. This study investigates a new methane-arrested anaerobic digestion (MAAD) process that converts high-strength cheese whey and brewery wastewater into carboxylic acids. The process was developed and optimized under various bench-scale semi-continuous (fed-batch) operating conditions (e.g., retention time, organic loading rate, pH, and feed/harvest frequency). The MAAD responses to various control-failure scenarios were also systematically investigated. The highest total acid productivity was 26 g/(L-liq center dot d) with a substrate conversion of 0.79 g CODdigested/g CODfed at a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of approximately 2 d in a 14-L digester. The most stable conditions for digester operation (HRT 3 d at pH 6.0 and 40 degrees C) were selected for process scale-up to 100 gal (similar to 380 L). Semi-continuous, pilot-scale MAAD successfully produced a total acid concentration of 40.6 +/- 1.1 g/L with 8.1 % acetic acid, 45.1 % butyric acid, and 44.5 % lactic acid. The links between wastewater characteristics, operation mode, digester scale, and microbial community structure were statistically analyzed. The results show genera Sporolactobacillus and Clostridium positively correlate with butyric acid production (Pearson correlation coefficient >0.5). Moreover, four kinetic models were developed and fit to batch MAAD experimental datasets (R-2 > 95 %) and were successfully applied to predict the total acid production in both bench-and pilot-scale semi-continuous MAADs. This study shows MAAD has the potential for industrial-scale applications and is a robust platform to valorize low-or negative-value waste streams into high-value bioproducts.
Author Keywords Bioprocess scale-up; Wastewater treatment; Microbial community; Kinetic modeling; Volatile fatty acid; Lactic acid
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:000946293600001
WoS Category Engineering, Environmental; Engineering, Chemical
Research Area Engineering
PDF http://manuscript.elsevier.com/S1385894722055607/pdf/S1385894722055607.pdf
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