RESUMO
This study investigated for the first time if ammonia tolerant methanogenic consortia can be stored in gel (biogel) and used in a later time on-demand as bioaugmentation inocula, to efficiently relieve ammonia inhibition in continuous biomethanation systems. Moreover, wood biochar was assessed as a potential enhancer of the novel biogel bioaugmentation process. Three thermophilic (55 °C), continuous stirred-tank reactors (RBgel, RChar and RMix), operated at 4.5 g NH4+-N L-1 were exposed to biogel, biochar and mixture of biogel and biochar, respectively, while a fourth reactor (RCtrl) was used as control. The results showed that the methane production yields of RMix, RChar and RBgel increased by 28.6%, 20.2% and 10.7%, respectively compared to RCtrl. The highest methane yield was achieved by the synergistic interaction between biogel and biochar. Additionally, biogel stimulated a rapid recovery of Methanoculleus thermophilus sp. and syntrophic acetate oxidising bacteria populations.
Assuntos
Amônia , Reatores Biológicos , Anaerobiose , Carvão Vegetal , MetanoRESUMO
In this study, strategies for recovery of ammonia-stressed AD reactors were attempted, by addition of preserved bioaugmentation consortium in gel (BioG), fresh consortium in liquid medium (BioL), woodchip biochar (BW), and straw biochar (BS). In comparison to control group with ammonia, effective treatments, i.e., BioG, BioL, BW and BS raised the maximum methane production rate by 77%, 23%, 35%, and 24%, respectively. BW possibly acted as interspecies electrical conduits for Direct Electron Transfer based on conductivity and SEM analysis. BioG facilitated slow release of bioaugmentation inocula from gel into the AD system, which protected them from a direct environmental shock. According to microbial analysis, both BioG, BioL and BW resulted in increased relative abundance of Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus; and BS induced selective raise of Methanosarcina thermophila. The increase of methanogens via these strategies led to the faster recovery of the AD process.