4.5 Article

Effect of ammonia on methane production pathways and reaction rates in acetate-fed biogas processes

Journal

WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 75, Issue 8, Pages 1839-1848

Publisher

IWA PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.2166/wst.2017.032

Keywords

Acetoclastic Methanogenesis; ammonia; reaction rate; stable carbon isotrope signature; syntrophic acetate oxidation

Funding

  1. China National Science Foundation [51622809, 51378375]
  2. China 111 Project

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In order to understand the correlation between ammonia and methanogenesis metabolism, methane production pathways and their specific rates were studied at total ammonium nitrogen (TAN) concentrations of 0.14-9 g/L in three methanogenic sludges fed with acetate, at both mesophilic and thermophilic conditions. Results showed that high levels of TAN had significant inhibition on methanogenesis; this could, however, be recovered via syntrophic acetate oxidation (SAO) coupled with Hydrogenotrophic Methanogenesis (HM) performed by acetate oxidizing syntrophs or through Acetoclastic Methanogenesis (AM) catalyzed by Methanosarcinaceae, after a long lag phase >50 d. Free ammonia (NH3) was the active component for this inhibition, of which 200 mg/L is suggested as the threshold for the pathway shift from AM to SAO-HM. Methane production rate via SAO-HM at TAN of 7-9 g/L was about 5-9-fold lower than that of AM at TAN of 0.14 g/L, which was also lower than the rate of AM pathway recovered at TAN of 7 g/L in the incubations with a French mesophilic inoculum. Thermophilic condition favored the establishment of the SAO-catalyzing microbial community, as indicated by the higher reaction rate and shorter lag phase. The operational strategy is thus suggested to be adjusted when NH3 exceeds 200 mg/L.

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