Publication | Open Access
Integrating Syngas Fermentation into a Single-Cell Microbial Electrosynthesis (MES) Reactor
18
Citations
15
References
2020
Year
Chemical EngineeringBiomanufacturingAnaerobic CulturingEngineeringIn Vitro FermentationSurface ElectrodesSyngas FermentationBiochemical EngineeringSynthetic BiologyBiotechnologyMetabolic EngineeringMicrobial Electrochemical SystemBioelectrochemical ReactorMicrobiologyBioprocess EngineeringBioelectrochemical SystemHydrogen GasHealth Sciences
This study presents a series of experiments to test the integration of syngas fermentation into a single-cell microbial electrosynthesis (MES) process. Minimal gas–liquid mass transfer is the primary bottleneck in such gas-fermentation processes. Therefore, we hypothesized that MES integration could trigger the thermodynamic barrier, resulting in higher gas–liquid mass transfer and product-formation rates. The study was performed in three different phases as batch experiments. The first phase dealt with mixed-culture fermentation at 1 bar H2 headspace pressure. During the second phase, surface electrodes were integrated into the fermentation medium, and investigations were performed in open-circuit mode. In the third phase, the electrodes were poised with a voltage, and the second phase was extended in closed-circuit mode. Phase 2 demonstrated three times the gas consumption (1021 mmol) and 63% more production of acetic acid (60 mmol/L) than Phase 1. However, Phase 3 failed; at –0.8 V, acetic acid was oxidized to yield hydrogen gas in the headspace.
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