Enhanced
Methane Production from Food Waste Using
Cysteine To Increase Biotransformation of l‑Monosaccharide,
Volatile Fatty Acids, and Biohydrogen
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Abstract
The
enhancement of two-stage anaerobic digestion of polysaccharide-enriched
food waste by the addition of cysteinean oxygen scavenger,
electron mediator, and nitrogen sourceto the acidification
stage was reported. It was found that in the acidification stage the
accumulation of volatile fatty acids (VFA), which mainly consisted
of acetate, butyrate, and propionate, was increased by 49.3% at a
cysteine dosage of 50 mg/L. Although some cysteine was biodegraded
in the acidification stage, the VFA derived from cysteine was negligible.
In the methanogenesis stage, the biotransformations of both VFA and
biohydrogen to methane were enhanced, and the methane yield was improved
by 43.9%. The mechanisms study showed that both d-glucose
and l-glucose (the model monosaccharides) were detectable
in the hydrolysis product, and the addition of cysteine remarkably
increased the acidification of l-glucose, especially acetic
acid and hydrogen generation, due to key enzymes involved in l-glucose metabolism being enhanced. Cysteine also improved the activity
of homoacetogens by 34.8% and hydrogenotrophic methanogens by 54%,
which might be due to the electron transfer process being accelerated.
This study provided an alternative method to improve anaerobic digestion
performance and energy recovery from food waste