Literature DB >> 29796000

In-Vessel Co-Composting of Food Waste Employing Enriched Bacterial Consortium.

Mukesh Kumar Awasthi1,2, Quan Wang1, Meijing Wang1, Hongyu Chen1, Xiuna Ren1, Junchao Zhao1, Zengqiang Zhang1.   

Abstract

The aim of the present study is to develop a good initial composting mix using a bacterial consortium and 2% lime for effective co-composting of food waste in a 60-litre in-vessel composter. In the experiment that lasted for 42 days, the food waste was first mixed with sawdust and 2% lime (by dry mass), then one of the reactors was inoculated with an enriched bacterial consortium, while the other served as control. The results show that inoculation of the enriched natural bacterial consortium effectively overcame the oil-laden co-composting mass in the composter and increased the rate of mineralization. In addition, CO2 evolution rate of (0.81±0.2) g/(kg·day), seed germination index of (105±3) %, extractable ammonium mass fraction of 305.78 mg/kg, C/N ratio of 16.18, pH=7.6 and electrical conductivity of 3.12 mS/cm clearly indicate that the compost was well matured and met the composting standard requirements. In contrast, control treatment exhibited a delayed thermophilic phase and did not mature after 42 days, as evidenced by the maturity parameters. Therefore, a good composting mix and potential bacterial inoculum to degrade the oil are essential for food waste co-composting systems.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bacterial consortium; composting mix formulation; lime; oily food waste

Year:  2018        PMID: 29796000      PMCID: PMC5956273          DOI: 10.17113/ftb.56.01.18.5439

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Food Technol Biotechnol        ISSN: 1330-9862            Impact factor:   3.918


  24 in total

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8.  Coal fly ash and lime addition enhances the rate and efficiency of decomposition of food waste during composting.

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9.  Nitrogen conservation and acidity control during food wastes composting through struvite formation.

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10.  Influence of lime and struvite on microbial community succession and odour emission during food waste composting.

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  1 in total

Review 1.  Bioengineered biochar as smart candidate for resource recovery toward circular bio-economy: a review.

Authors:  Hong Liu; Vinay Kumar; Vivek Yadav; Shasha Guo; Surendra Sarsaiya; Parameswaran Binod; Raveendran Sindhu; Ping Xu; Zengqiang Zhang; Ashok Pandey; Mukesh Kumar Awasthi
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  1 in total

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