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. 2015 Apr:182:383-388.
doi: 10.1016/j.biortech.2015.01.138. Epub 2015 Feb 7.

Dark fermentative bioconversion of glycerol to hydrogen by Bacillus thuringiensis

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Dark fermentative bioconversion of glycerol to hydrogen by Bacillus thuringiensis

Prasun Kumar et al. Bioresour Technol. 2015 Apr.

Abstract

Biodiesel manufacturing units discharge effluents rich in glycerol. The need is to convert crude glycerol (CG) into useful products such as hydrogen (H2). Under batch culture, Bacillusthuringiensis EGU45 adapted on pure glycerol (PG, 2% v/v) resulted in an H2 yield of 0.646 mol/mol glycerol consumed on minimal media (250 mL) supplemented with 1% ammonium nitrate at 37°C over 4 days. Here, H2 constituted 67% of the total biogas. Under continuous culture, at 2 days of hydraulic retention time, B. thuringiensis immobilized on ligno-cellulosic materials (banana leaves - BL, 10% v/v) resulted in a H2 yield of 0.386 mol/mol PG consumed. On CG, the maximal H2 yield of 0.393 mol/mol feed consumed was recorded. In brief, B. thuringiensis could transform CG, on limited resources - minimal medium with sodium nitrate, by immobilizing them on cheap and easily available biowaste, which makes it a suitable candidate for H2 production on a large scale.

Keywords: Adaptation; Bacillus; Continuous culture; Crude glycerol; Dark fermentation.

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