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Producing volatile fatty acids and polyhydroxyalkanoates from foods by-products and waste: A review

Journal

BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 361, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2022.127716

Keywords

Biorefinery; Cheese whey; Olive mill wastewaters; Wine wastewaters; Organic Fraction of Municipal Solid Waste

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Dairy products, olive oil, and wines are popular food products that generate significant amounts of by-products, which can be recycled and utilized. In addition, there is a high potential for bio-refining the organic waste stream generated in urban areas to produce organic acids and polyesters.
Dairy products, extra virgin olive oil, red and white wines are excellent food products, appreciated all around the world. Their productions generate large amounts of by-products which urge for recycling and valorization. Moreover, another abundant waste stream produced in urban context is the Organic Fraction of Municipal Solid Wastes (OFMSW), whose global annual capita production is estimated at 85 kg. The recent environmental policies encourage their exploitation in a biorefinery loop to produce Volatile Fatty Acids (VFAs) and polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs). Typically, VFAs yields are high from cheese whey and OFMSW (0.55-0.90 gCOD_VFAs/ gCOD), lower for Olive Mill and Winery Wastewaters. The VFAs conversion into PHAs can achieve values in the range 0.4-0.5 gPHA/gVSS for cheese whey and OFMSW, 0.6-0.7 gPHA/gVSS for winery wastewater, and 0.2-0.3 gPHA/gVSS for olive mill wastewaters. These conversion yields allowed to estimate a huge potential annual PHAs production of about 260 M tons.

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