School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, Patiala 147004, India.
School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, Patiala 147004, India.
Sci Total Environ. 2020 Apr 15;713:136633. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.136633. Epub 2020 Jan 14.
The energy demand has increased exponentially worldwide owing to the continuously growing population and urbanization. The conventional fossil fuels are unable to satiate this requirement causing price inflation and significant environmental damage due to unrestrained emission of greenhouse gases. The focus now has shifted towards alternative, economical, renewable and green sources of energy such as hydrogen to deal with this bottle-neck. Hydrogen is a clean energy-source having high energy content (122 kJ/g). Recently, biological methods for the hydrogen production have attracted much attention because traditional methods are expensive, energy-exhaustive and not eco-friendly. The employment of biological methods promises utilization of waste or low-value materials for producing energy and building waste-to-energy nexus. Around 94% of the waste is discarded precariously in India and waste generation is growing at an alarming rate of 1.3% per year. The "waste-to-energy" techniques follow 'Reuse, Reduce, Recycle, Recovery and Reclamation' system solving three subjects at once; waste-management, energy-demand and environmental concern. Moreover, these methods have easy operability, cost-effectiveness and they help to shift from linear to circular model of economy for sustainable development. Biological processing of waste materials like agricultural discard (lignocellulosic biomass), food-waste and industrial discharge can be used for biohydrogen production. Dark and photo fermentation are the chief biological processes for the transformation of organic substrates to hydrogen. Dark fermentation is the acidogenic fermentation of carbohydrate-rich materials without light and oxygen. Clostridia, Enterobacter and Bacillus spp. are appropriate heterotrophic bacteria for dark fermentation. Various pretreatment methods like heat treatment, acid or base treatment, ultrasonication, aeration, electroporation, etc., can be applied on inoculums to increase H producing bacteria eventually improving the hydrogen yield. However, only around 33% of COD in organic materials is transformed to H by this method. Photofermentation by the photosynthetic non-sulfur bacteria (PNS) converts organic substrate to H and CO in the presence of nitrogenase enzyme in ammonium-limited and anoxygenic conditions. Rhodobacter or Rhodopseudomonas strains have been widely examined in this regard. But these methods are only able to produce H with a poor yield. Combining dark and photofermentation is a noteworthy alternative for procuring enhanced hydrogen yields. Two-stage sequential method utilizes volatile fatty acids accumulated as byproducts after dark fermentation (in the first stage) for photofermentation by suitable bacteria (in the second stage). A proper investigation of the dark fermenter effluents is required before using them as a substrate for photo-fermentation. In a single-stage dark and photofermentation, co-culture of anaerobic and PNS bacteria in a single reactor is carried out for obtaining improved yield. The single stage system is comparatively inexpensive and less laborious; moreover, a limited requirement for an intermediate dilution stage is necessary. Economic analysis of hydrogen production showed that H production by the present methods, save pyrolysis, is reasonably higher than the conventional approaches of fuel production. Probable routes to make H production more cost-effective are reducing the cost of photobioreactor, installing proper storage system, etc. A constructive effort in the area of research and development of biological approaches of H production technologies is vital. The commercial viability of biohydrogen production is imperative for accomplishment of circular economy system and sustainable development.
由于全球人口不断增长和城市化进程的加速,能源需求呈指数级增长。传统的化石燃料无法满足这一需求,导致价格上涨,并因温室气体无限制排放而造成严重的环境破坏。现在的焦点已经转移到替代能源、经济、可再生和绿色能源上,例如氢气,以应对这一瓶颈。氢气是一种清洁能源,具有高能量含量(122kJ/g)。最近,生物制氢方法引起了广泛关注,因为传统方法昂贵、能源消耗大且不环保。生物方法的应用有望利用废物或低值材料来生产能源,并建立废物到能源的联系。印度约有 94%的废物被危险地丢弃,废物产生量以每年 1.3%的惊人速度增长。“废物到能源”技术遵循“再利用、减少、回收、恢复和开垦”系统,同时解决三个问题;废物管理、能源需求和环境问题。此外,这些方法具有易于操作、具有成本效益,并有助于从线性经济模式向循环经济模式转变,以实现可持续发展。可以利用农业废弃物(木质纤维素生物质)、食品废物和工业排放等废物材料进行生物制氢。暗发酵和光发酵是将有机基质转化为氢气的主要生物过程。暗发酵是在没有光和氧的情况下对富含碳水化合物的物质进行产酸发酵。梭菌、肠杆菌和芽孢杆菌属等都是适合暗发酵的异养细菌。可以对接种物施加各种预处理方法,如热处理、酸碱处理、超声处理、曝气、电穿孔等,以增加产氢细菌,最终提高氢气产量。然而,这种方法只能将有机材料中约 33%的 COD 转化为 H。在铵限制和乏氧条件下,通过非硫光合细菌(PNS)的光合作用发酵将有机基质转化为 H 和 CO。已经广泛研究了红杆菌或红假单胞菌菌株。但这些方法只能产生产量较低的 H。暗发酵和光发酵的结合是提高氢气产量的一种很有意义的替代方法。两步顺序法利用暗发酵(第一阶段)后积累的挥发性脂肪酸作为光发酵(第二阶段)的合适细菌的副产物。在将暗发酵器流出物用作光发酵的底物之前,需要对其进行适当的研究。在单一阶段的暗发酵和光发酵中,在单个反应器中混合厌氧细菌和 PNS 细菌以获得提高的产量。单级系统比较便宜,劳动强度也较小;此外,只需要有限的中间稀释阶段。氢气生产的经济分析表明,与传统的燃料生产方法相比,通过目前的方法(除热解外)生产 H 的成本合理更高。降低光生物反应器成本、安装适当的储存系统等,是使 H 生产更具成本效益的可能途径。在生物制氢技术的研究和开发领域进行建设性的努力至关重要。生物制氢的商业可行性对于实现循环经济系统和可持续发展至关重要。