4.1 Article

Adaptation of a microbial community to demand-oriented biological methanation

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13068-022-02207-w

Keywords

Renewable energy; Power to methane; Biological methanation; Biogas upgrade; Hydrogenotrophic methanogens; Acetoclastic methanogens; Hydrogen starvation; Metaproteomics; Microbial food web

Funding

  1. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) of the German Federal State Saxony-Anhalt in the scope of the Research Center of Dynamic Systems (CDS) Magdeburg
  2. Projekt DEAL

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This study investigated the resilience of a hydrogenotrophic microbial community in a laboratory-scale biological methanation reactor to power oscillations. The results demonstrated that the microbial community had a high adaptive potential and the methane production rate quickly recovered after various on-off hydrogen feeding regimes. The study also revealed that discontinuous feeding strategies could be used to enrich methanogenic Archaea in the microbial community, which contributes to the design and improvement of biological methanation processes.
Background Biological conversion of the surplus of renewable electricity and carbon dioxide (CO2) from biogas plants to biomethane (CH4) could support energy storage and strengthen the power grid. Biological methanation (BM) is linked closely to the activity of biogas-producing Bacteria and methanogenic Archaea. During reactor operations, the microbiome is often subject to various changes, e.g., substrate limitation or pH-shifts, whereby the microorganisms are challenged to adapt to the new conditions. In this study, various process parameters including pH value, CH4 production rate, conversion yields and final gas composition were monitored for a hydrogenotrophic-adapted microbial community cultivated in a laboratory-scale BM reactor. To investigate the robustness of the BM process regarding power oscillations, the biogas microbiome was exposed to five hydrogen (H-2)-feeding regimes lasting several days. Results Applying various on-off H-2-feeding regimes, the CH4 production rate recovered quickly, demonstrating a significant resilience of the microbial community. Analyses of the taxonomic composition of the microbiome revealed a high abundance of the bacterial phyla Firmicutes, Bacteroidota and Thermotogota followed by hydrogenotrophic Archaea of the phylum Methanobacteriota. Homo-acetogenic and heterotrophic fermenting Bacteria formed a complex food web with methanogens. The abundance of the methanogenic Archaea roughly doubled during discontinuous H-2-feeding, which was related mainly to an increase in acetoclastic Methanothrix species. Results also suggested that Bacteria feeding on methanogens could reduce overall CH4 production. On the other hand, using inactive biomass as a substrate could support the growth of methanogenic Archaea. During the BM process, the additional production of H-2 by fermenting Bacteria seemed to support the maintenance of hydrogenotrophic methanogens at non-H-2-feeding phases. Besides the elusive role of Methanothrix during the H-2-feeding phases, acetate consumption and pH maintenance at the non-feeding phase can be assigned to this species. Conclusions Taken together, the high adaptive potential of microbial communities contributes to the robustness of BM processes during discontinuous H-2-feeding and supports the commercial use of BM processes for energy storage. Discontinuous feeding strategies could be used to enrich methanogenic Archaea during the establishment of a microbial community for BM. Both findings could contribute to design and improve BM processes from lab to pilot scale.

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