4.5 Article

Mango Peel Nanofiltration Concentrates to Enhance Anaerobic Digestion of Slurry from Piglets Fed with Laminaria

Journal

MEMBRANES
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/membranes13040371

Keywords

mango peel; pig slurry; Laminaria; nanofiltration; sugar concentrates solutions; anaerobic digestion; anaerobic co-digestion; biogas production performance; biowaste valorisation

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The study evaluated the impact of adding sugar concentrate solutions obtained from nanofiltration of fruit biowaste to slurry from piglets fed with macroalgae on biogas production. The use of nanofiltration of mango peel extracts increased the methane production by 29% during anaerobic co-digestion. These findings contribute to the development of sustainable valorization routes for biowastes.
The environmental impact of biowaste generated during animal production can be mitigated by applying a circular economy model: recycling, reinventing the life cycle of biowaste, and developing it for a new use. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of adding sugar concentrate solutions obtained from the nanofiltration of fruit biowaste (mango peel) to slurry from piglets fed with diets incorporating macroalgae on biogas production performance. The nanofiltration of ultrafiltration permeates from aqueous extracts of mango peel was carried out using membranes with a molecular weight cut-off of 130 Da until a volume concentration factor of 2.0 was reached. A slurry resulting from piglets fed with an alternative diet with the incorporation of 10% Laminaria was used as a substrate. Three different trials were performed sequentially: (i) a control trial (AD(0)) with faeces resulting from a cereal and soybean-meal-based diet (S0); (ii) a trial with S-1 (10% L. digitata) (AD(1)), and (iii) an AcoD trial to assess the effect of the addition of a co-substrate (20%) to S1 (80%). The trials were performed in a continuous-stirred tank reactor (CSTR) under mesophilic conditions (37.0 +/- 0.4 degrees C), with a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 13 days. The specific methane production (SMP) increased by 29% during the anaerobic co-digestion process. These results can support the design of alternative valorisation routes for these biowastes, contributing to sustainable development goals.

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