Content area

Abstract

As the by-product of the vinegar production process, a large number of vinegar residue has been abandoned and caused a serious environmental pollution. Anaerobic digestion has been proved to be able to dispose and convert vinegar residue into bioenergy but still need to improve the efficiency. This study applied central composite design of response surface methodology to investigate the influences of feed to inoculum ratio, organic loading, and initial pH on methane production and optimize anaerobic digestion condition. The maximum methane yield of 203.91 mL gVS−1 and biodegradability of 46.99% were obtained at feed to inoculum ratio of 0.5, organic loading of 31.49 gVS L−1, and initial pH of 7.29, which was considered as the best condition. It has a very significant improvement of 69.48% for methane production and 52.02% for biodegradability compared with our previous study. Additionally, a high methane yield of 182.09 mL gVS−1 was obtained at feed to inoculum ratio of 1.5, organic loading of 46.22 gVS L−1, and initial pH of 7.32. And it is more appropriate to apply this condition in industrial application owing to the high feed to inoculum ratio and organic loading. Besides, a significant interaction was found between feed to inoculum ratio and organic loading. This study maximized the methane production of vinegar residue and made a good foundation for further study and future industrial application.

Details

Title
Enhanced methane production of vinegar residue by response surface methodology (RSM)
Author
Feng, Jiayu 1 ; Zhang, Jiyu 1 ; Zhang, Jiafu 1 ; He, Yanfeng 1 ; Zhang, Ruihong 2 ; Chen, Chang 1 ; Liu, Guangqing 1 

 College of Chemical Engineering, Beijing University of Chemical Technology, Beijing, People’s Republic of China 
 Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, University of California, Davis, CA, USA 
Pages
1-8
Publication year
2017
Publication date
May 2017
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
e-ISSN
21910855
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1957254374
Copyright
AMB Express is a copyright of Springer, 2017.