4.8 Article

Low carbon hydrogen production from a waste-based biorefinery system and environmental sustainability assessment

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GREEN CHEMISTRY
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 561-574

出版社

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0gc03063e

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资金

  1. Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE), Government of India [103/131/2008-NT]
  2. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Government of India [CSC-0113]
  3. CSIR-INPROTICS Project [HCP-0011, MLP-0033]
  4. CSIR
  5. UGC
  6. CSIR-IICT [IICT/Pubs/2019/409]

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This study demonstrates the pilot-scale production of bio-H2 and VFA from food waste as a renewable feedstock, and integrates the acidogenic process with a biorefinery platform to derive multiple biobased products. The life cycle assessment results indicate that the waste biorefinery approach offers lower environmental impact compared to standalone bio-H2 production, helping reduce carbon emissions and achieve carbon neutrality.
Production of low carbon biofuels and biochemicals from renewable feedstocks using a biological process is considered a sustainable alternative to the fossil-fuel-based linear economy. This study demonstrated the pilot-scale (10 m(3)) production of biohydrogen (bio-H-2) and volatile fatty acids/carboxylic acids (VFA) through acidogenic fermentation (AF) using food waste (FW) as renewable feedstock. Bio-H-2 production of 54 288 L (155.10 LH2 per kg COD) along with 25.77 g L-1 of VFA composed of acetic (H-Ac: 15.2 +/- 1.98 g L-1), propionic (H-Pr: 4.89 +/- 1.26 g L-1) and butyric (H-Bu 5.67 +/- 0.96 g L-1) acids was achieved within 48 h of the fermentation period. The further acidogenic process was integrated with a biorefinery platform (methanogenesis + photosynthesis) in a circular loop strategy which helped derive multiple biobased products (CH4, algal biomass, O-2 and treated water for reuse) from fatty acid-rich acidogenic effluent and untreated COD of AF. The whole bio-manufacturing unit (acidogenesis + methanogenesis + photosynthesis) converted the renewable feedstock (waste/wastewater) into fuels and platform chemicals, in analogy to a conventional oil refinery with a maximized resource recovery. The life cycle assessment (LCA) tool was employed to study the environmental impact of both the bio-H-2 (standalone, ST) and waste biorefinery (WB) processes, and the results depicted that the WB approach offered a relatively low impact (approx. 3.5 fold less than ST). The approach helped determine the flow of carbon and its conversion to products; this aided the reduction of carbon emissions as well as minimized the burden on natural resources with the biosynthesis of green H-2 and other value-added products, addressing carbon neutrality with bioeconomy.

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