| Literature DB >> 28469708 |
Giorgia Pagliano1, Valeria Ventorino1, Antonio Panico2, Olimpia Pepe1.
Abstract
Recently, issuesEntities:
Keywords: Biochemicals and bioenergy; Biogas; Biohydrogen; Biopolymers; PHAs
Year: 2017 PMID: 28469708 PMCID: PMC5414342 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-017-0802-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Fig. 1General structure of polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs). The most studied PHA type is the homopolymer P(3HB), for which n is equal to 1 and R is a methyl group [13]
Overview of studies reporting PHA production from starch-based materials
| Strain | Type of PHA | Operation mode | Time to PHAmax [h] | PHA concentration [g l−1] | PHA content [%] | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| P(3HB) | Fed-batch | 70 | 25 | 46 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Batch | 72 | 0.48 | 48 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Fed-batch | 168 | 51.1 | 70 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Batch | 69 | 41.5 | 66 | [ |
| Fed-batch | 171 | 130.2 | 80 | |||
|
| P(3HB) | Batch | 72 | 94 | 22 | [ |
|
| PHA | Batch | 96 | 2.8 | 65.3 | [ |
| Recombinant | P(3HB) | Batch | 72 | 1.2 | 40 | [ |
Overview of studies reporting PHA production from molasses and sucrose
| Strain | Type of PHA | Operation mode | Time to PHAmax [h] | PHA concentration [g l−1] | PHA content [%] | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recombinant | P(3HB) | Fed-batch | 31.5 | 31.6 | 80 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Batch | 96 | 22.4 | 70 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Fed-batch | 45–50 | 80–100 | 65–70 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Batch | 72 | 0.13 | 73.8 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Fed-batch | 35 | 23 | 66 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Fed-batch | 24 | 72.7 | 42 | [ |
Overview of studies reporting PHA production from lignocellulosic materials
| Strain | Type of PHA | Operation mode | Time to PHAmax [h] | PHA concentration [g l−1] | PHA content [%] | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| P(3HB) | Batch | 25 | 2.73 | 62 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Batch | 25 | 2.33 | 53 | [ |
|
| PHA | Batch | 48 | 3.9 | 65 | [ |
| Recombinant | P(3HB) | Batch | 60 | 1.7 | 35.8 | [ |
| 60 | 4.4 | 73.9 | ||||
|
| P(3HB) | Batch | 48 | 11.4 | 75.5 | [ |
Overview of studies reporting PHA production from whey-based culture media
| Strain | Type of PHA | Operation mode | Time to PHAmax [h] | PHA concentration [g l−1] | PHA content [%] | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recombinant | P(3HB) | Batch | 49 | 5.2 | 81.3 | [ |
| Recombinant | P(3HB) | Fed-batch with oxygen limitation | 52 | 25 | 80 | [ |
| Fed-batch without oxygen limitation | 35 | 32 | 57 | |||
|
| P(3HB) | Fed-batch | 41 | 1.27 | 12 | [ |
| P(3HB-co-3HV) | 31 | 1.44 | 12 | |||
| Recombinant | P(3HB) | Fed-batch | 24 | 51.1 | 72.9 | [ |
| Recombinant | P(3HB) | Fed-batch | 36.5 | 96.2 | 80.5 | [ |
| Recombinant | P(3HB) | Fed-batch 30-l bioreactor | 26 | 35.5 | 70 | [ |
| Fed-batch 300-l bioreactor | 20 | 20 | 67 |
Overview of studies reporting PHA production from oil, fatty acid, and glycerol culture media
| Strain | Type of PHA | Operation mode | Time to PHAmax [h] | PHA concentration [g l−1] | PHA content [%] | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| P(3HB) | Fed-batch | 33.5 | 51.2 | 62 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Batch | 72 | 2.9–3.4 | 79–82 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Fed-batch | 96 | 85–95 | 72–76 | [ |
|
| P(3HB) | Batch | 96 | 1.24 | 19.7 | [ |
|
| PHA | Batch | 48 | 0.14 | 15.2 | [ |
Overview of studies reporting PHA production from solid agro-industrial by-products
| Strain | Type of PHA | Operation mode | Time to PHAmax [h] | PHA concentration [g l−1] | PHA content [%] | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recombinant | P(3HB) | Batch | 12 | 0.06 | 2.5 | [ |
|
| P(3HB-co-3HV) | Batch | 48 | 0.43 | 37 | [ |
| 18 | 5.48 | 58.3 | ||||
|
| P(3HB-co-3HV) | Batch | 45 | 1.13 | 40.8 | [ |
| Batch | 48 | 1.2 | 34.1 | [ | ||
| Fed-batch | 73 | 16.5 | 72.6 | [ | ||
| Activated sludge | P(3HB) | Batch | 96 | 2.7 | 67 | [ |
Overview of studies reporting PHA production coupled to metabolites used in industry
| Strain | Type of PHA | Operation mode | Time to PHAmax [h] | PHA concentration [g l−1] | PHA content [%] | Produced metabolites [g l−1] | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| PHA | Batch | 72 | 0.5 | 23 | Rhamnolipids 0.3 | [ |
|
| PHB | Batch | 60 | 12.7 | 62 | EPS 0.18 | [ |
|
| PHB | Batch | 40 | 2.73 | 54.6 | EPS 1.2 | [ |
|
| PHB | Batch | 48 | 0.74 | 28 | EPS 2.1 | [ |
|
| PHAMCL | Batch | 48 | 0.316 | 25.3 | Alginate oligosaccharides 0.57 | [ |
Fig. 2Phases of biological production of methane with the occurrence of VFAs, acetate, hydrogen, and carbon dioxide. Anaerobic bacteria involved are positioned according to their probable role in the process
Methane yields of solid organic substrates.
Adapted from Raposo et al. [85]
| Solid organic substrate | Methane yield [ml CH4 g−1 VSadded] | References |
|---|---|---|
| Apple fresh wastes | 317 | [ |
| Banana peeling | 289 | [ |
| Cabbage leaves 2 mm size | 309 | [ |
| Carrot peeling | 388 | [ |
| Cauliflower leaves | 341–352 | [ |
| Cellulose | 356–375 | [ |
| Cocksfoot | 325 | [ |
| Food wastes | 245–510 | [ |
| Fruit and vegetable wastes | 470 | [ |
| Glucose | 335 | [ |
| Kitchen waste | 432 | [ |
| Leather fleshing | 490 | [ |
| Lettuce residues | 294 | [ |
| Maize residues | 317 | [ |
| Mandarin peels 2 mm size | 486 | [ |
| OFMSW | 353 | [ |
| Orange peeling | 297 | [ |
| Paper and cardboard | 109–128 | [ |
| Pineapple peel | 400 | [ |
| Potato waste | 320 referred to gVSremoved | [ |
| Rape oil seed | 800–900 | [ |
| Rice straw | 347–367 | [ |
| Starch | 348 | [ |
| Sugar beet | 340 | [ |
| Sunflower | 428–454 | [ |
| Textiles | 228 | [ |
| Tomato skins and seeds | 218 | [ |
| Wheat straw | 267 | [ |
| Algal biomass | 640 | [ |
Hydrogen yields of different substrates.
Adapted from Li and Fang [141], Davila-Vazquez et al. [158]
| Substrate | Strain | Hydrogen yield | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sucrose |
| 2.78 [mol H2 mol−1 substrate] | [ |
| Glucose |
| 2 [mol H2 mol−1 substrate] | [ |
| Glucose |
| 1.6 [mol H2 mol−1 substrate] | [ |
| Molasses |
| 2.6 [mol H2 mol−1 substrate] | [ |
| Rice straw |
| 2.7 [mol H2 mol−1 substrate] | [ |
| Cheese whey |
| 2.4 [mol H2 mol−1 substrate] | [ |
| Cheese whey |
| 2.7 [mol H2 mol−1 substrate] | [ |
| Starch | Mesophilic bacterium HN001 | 2 [mol H2 mol−1 substrate] | [ |
| Starch | Mixed culture from compost | 133 [ml H2 g−1 hexose] | [ |
| Cellulose | Mixed culture from sludge | 92 [ml H2 g−1 hexose] | [ |
| Mixed waste | Mixed culture from anaerobic digestion sludge | 201 [ml H2 g−1 hexose] | [ |
| Food waste | Mixed culture from anaerobic digestion sludge | 210 [ml H2 g−1 hexose] | [ |
| Acetate |
| 62.3 [mol H2 mol−1 substrate] | [ |
| Rice husk |
| 17.24 [mmol H2 g−1 cellulose] | [ |
Fig. 3Cycle of polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) production system
(Adapted from Serafim et al. [173])
Fig. 4Sustainable PHAs and bioenergy production from organic wastes and by-products converted by different bacterial species: an overview of the principal process considered in this review
Waste, reactor configuration, and operation for the production of VFAs
Adapted from Lee et al. [174]
| Type of waste | Organic content (mg COD l−1) | Reactor type and operating conditions | VFA production | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Waste activated sludge | 18.657 | Batch, 55 °C, pH = 8, HRT = 9 days | 368 mg COD gVSS−1 | [ |
| 14.878 | Batch, 21 °C, HRT = 6 days | 339 mg COD l−1 | [ | |
| Primary sludge | 22.838 | Batch, 21 °C, HRT = 6 days | 85 mg COD gVSS−1 | [ |
| 20.631 | Batch, 21 °C, pH = 10, room temp, HRT = 5 days | 60 mg COD gVSS−1 day−1 | [ | |
| Food waste | 91.900 | Batch, 37 °C, pH = 5.5 | 8950 mg COD l−1 | [ |
| 146.1 | Batch, 35 °C, HRT = 5 days | 5610 mg COD l−1 | [ | |
| Kitchen waste | 166.18 | Batch, 35 °C, pH = 7, HRT = 4 days | 36 mg l−1 | [ |
| OFMSW | 347.0 | Batch, 14–22 °C, pH = 4–5, HRT = 4–4.5 days | 40 mg g−1 VS | [ |
| 196.7 | Plug flow, 37 °C, pH = 5.7–6.1, HRT = SRT = 6 days, OLR = 38.5 gVS l−1 day−1 | 23.110 mg l−1 | [ | |
| Palm oil mill | 88.0 | Semi-continuous, 30 °C, pH = 6.5, HRT = 4 days | 15.300 mg l−1 | [ |
| Olive oil mill | 37.0 | Packed bed biofilm, 25 °C, pH = 5.2–5.5, HRT = 14 days, OLR = 26 g COD l−1 day−1 | 10.700 mg COD l−1 | [ |
| Cheese whey | 4590 | CSTR, 37 °C, pH = 6, HRT = 2.1 days | 0.84 gVFA-COD g−1 sCOD−1 | [ |