| Literature DB >> 29704762 |
Xuya Peng1, ShangYi Zhang1, Lei Li2, Xiaofei Zhao1, Yao Ma1, Dezhi Shi1.
Abstract
A long-term high solids anaerobic digestion of food waste was conducted to identify microbial mechanisms of ammonia inhibition during digestion and to clarify correlations between ammonia accumulation, microbial community dynamics (diversity, composition, and interactions), and process stability. Results show that the effects of ammonia on process performance and microbial community were indirectly caused by volatile fatty acid accumulation. Excess free ammonia blocked acetate metabolism, leading to process instability. Accumulated acetate caused feedback inhibition at the acetogenesis stage, which resulted in considerable accumulation of propionate, valerate, and other long-chain fatty acids. This high concentration of volatile fatty acids reduced the abundance of syntrophic acetogenic bacteria and allowed hydrolytic fermentative bacteria to dominate. The normally interactive and orderly metabolic network was broken, which further exacerbated the process instability. These results improve the understanding of microbial mechanisms which contribute to process instability and provide guidance for the microbial management of anaerobic digesters.Entities:
Keywords: Ammonia inhibition; Food waste; High-solids anaerobic digestion; Microbial community; Process performance
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29704762 DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2018.04.076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioresour Technol ISSN: 0960-8524 Impact factor: 9.642