| Literature DB >> 35185266 |
Yuxia Ji1, Mansoor A Sultan2, Doo Young Kim3, Noah Meeks4, Jeffrey Todd Hastings2, Dibakar Bhattacharyya1.
Abstract
A biological photoinduced fermentation process provides an alternative to traditional hydrogen productions. In this study, biohydrogen production was investigated at near IR region coupled to a near-field enhancement by silica-core gold-shell nanoparticles (NPs) over a range of acetate concentrations (5-40 mM) and light intensities (11-160 W/m2). The kinetic data were modeled using modified Monod equations containing light intensity effects. The yields of H2 and CO2 produced per acetate were determined as 2.31 mol-H2/mol-Ac and 0.83 mol-CO2/mol-Ac and increased to 4.38 mmol-H2/mmol-Ma and 2.62 mmol-CO2/mmol-Ma when malate was used. Maximum increases in H2 and CO2 productions by 115% and 113% were observed by adding NPs without affecting the bacterial growth rates (6.1-8.2 mg-DCM/L/hour) while the highest hydrogen production rate was determined as 0.81 mmol/L/hour. Model simulations showed that the energy conversion efficiency increased with NPs concentration but decreased with the intensity. Complete hydrogenation application was demonstrated with toxic 2-chlorobiphenyl using Pd catalysts.Entities:
Keywords: Biohydrogen; Carbon dioxide; Near-IR; Silica-core gold-shell nanoparticle
Year: 2021 PMID: 35185266 PMCID: PMC8856669 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijhydene.2020.11.257
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hydrogen Energy ISSN: 0360-3199 Impact factor: 5.816