Effect
of Humic Acids with Different Characteristics
on Fermentative Short-Chain Fatty Acids Production from Waste Activated
Sludge
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Abstract
Recently,
the use of waste activated sludge to bioproduce short-chain
fatty acids (SCFA) has attracted much attention as the sludge-derived
SCFA can be used as a preferred carbon source to drive biological
nutrient removal or biopolymer (polyhydroxyalkanoates) synthesis.
Although large number of humic acid (HA) has been reported in sludge,
the influence of HA on SCFA production has never been documented.
This study investigated the effects on sludge-derived SCFA production
of two commercially available humic acids (referred to as SHHA and
SAHA purchased respectively from Shanghai Reagent Company and Sigma-Aldrich)
that differ in chemical structure, hydrophobicity, surfactant properties,
and degree of aromaticity. It was found that SHHA remarkably enhanced
SCFA production (1.7-3.5 folds), while SAHA had no obvious effect.
Mechanisms study revealed that all four steps (solubilization, hydrolysis,
acidification, and methanogenesis) involved in sludge fermentation
were unaffected by SAHA. However, SHHA remarkably improved the solubilization
of sludge protein and carbohydrate and the activity of hydrolysis
enzymes (protease and α-glucosidase) owing to its greater hydrophobicity
and protection of enzyme activity. SHHA also enhanced the acidification
step by accelerating the bioreactions of glyceradehyde-3P → d-glycerate 1,3-diphosphate, and pyruvate → acetyl-CoA
due to its abundant quinone groups which served as electron acceptor.
Further investigation showed that SHHA negatively influenced the activity
of acetoclastic methanogens for its competition for electrons and
inhibition on the reaction of acetyl-CoA → 5-methyl-THMPT,
which caused less SCFA being consumed. All these observations were
in correspondence with SHHA significantly enhancing the production
of sludge derived SCFA