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Design and optimization of hydrogen production from hydrothermally pretreated sugarcane bagasse using response surface methodology
27
Citations
23
References
2017
Year
Hydrogen Energy TechnologyHydrogen ProductionBioenergyEngineeringEnergy ConversionHydrogen GenerationChemical EngineeringBiomass ConversionBiochemical EngineeringSugarcane BagasseHealth SciencesBiomass UtilizationFood FermentationIn Vitro FermentationArchaeal PopulationHydrogen UtilizationHydrogen Production TechnologyHydrogenBiomanufacturingEnvironmental EngineeringResponse Surface MethodologyHydrothermal Processing
Hydrogen production from hydrothermally pretreated (200 °C for 10 min at 16 bar) sugarcane bagasse was analyzed using response surface methodology. The yeast extract concentration and the temperature had a significant influence for hydrogen production (p-value 0.027 and 0.009, respectively). Maximum hydrogen production (17.7 mmol/L) was observed with 3 g/L yeast extract at 60 °C (C10). In this conditions were produced acetic acid (50.44 mg/L), butyric acid (209.71 mg/L), ethanol (38.4 mg/L), and methane (6.27 mmol/L). Lower hydrogen productions (3.5 mmol/L and 3.9 mmol/L) were observed under the conditions C7 (2 g/L of yeast extract, 35.8 °C) and C9 (1 g/L of yeast extract, 40 °C), respectively. The low yeast extract concentration and low temperature caused a negative effect on the hydrogen production. By means of denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis 20% of similarity was observed between the archaeal population of mesophilic (35 and 40 °C) and thermophilic (50, 60 and 64 °C) reactors. Likewise, similarity of 22% was noted between the bacterial population for the reactors with the lowest hydrogen production (3.5 mmol/L), at 35.8 °C and with the highest hydrogen production (17.7 mmol/L) at 60 °C demonstrating that microbial population modification was a function of incubation temperature variation.
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