4.7 Article

Combined ultrasonic-hydrothermal pretreatment to improve the biomethane potential of hazelnut shell

Journal

BIOMASS & BIOENERGY
Volume 165, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biombioe.2022.106554

Keywords

Hazelnut shell; Hydrothermal pretreatment; Ultrasounds; Anaerobic digestion; Biomethane; Energy balance

Funding

  1. scientific research unit (BAP) at Giresun University [FEN-BAP-A-270220-22]

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This study evaluated the application of hydrothermal and ultrasonic pretreatments on hazelnut shell for promoting its energetic valorization. The results showed that the hydrothermally and ultrasonically-pretreated hazelnut shell achieved a significantly higher biomethane yield under wet-mesophilic conditions compared to the raw hazelnut shell. This increase in biomethane yield was attributed to enhanced hemicellulose polymerization and delignification after the sequential hydrothermal and ultrasonic pretreatment. Additionally, the biomethane production was mainly influenced by the soluble chemical oxygen demand.
This work evaluated for the first time the employment of hydrothermal alone (i.e. at 60, 80 and 100 degrees C) and combined ultrasonic-hydrothermal pretreatments on hazelnut shell (HS) to promote the energetic valorization of HS through anaerobic digestion. The highest cumulative biomethane yield of 137 mL CH4 center dot g VS-1 was achieved performing biochemical methane potential tests under wet-mesophilic conditions with the hydrothermally (i.e. at 100 degrees C) and ultrasonically-pretreated HS. This CH4 yield was 2.3-fold higher than that obtained with the raw HS due to an enhanced hemicellulose polymerization and delignification after the sequential hydrothermal and ultrasonic pretreatment. Under the same pretreatment conditions, total volatile fatty acids peaked at 755 mg HAc L-1. The biomethane production followed the modified Gompertz model (R2 = 0.993-0.996) and a Pearson correlation test showed that it was mainly influenced by the soluble chemical oxygen demand (i.e. 0.983). A positive energy balance revealed that the produced biomethane can offset the energy needed for the pretreatment.

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