{"title":"Biohydrogen synthesis from food waste hydrolysate: Optimization using statistical design of experiments (DoE) and artificial neural network (ANN)","authors":"Avinash Anand , Chandan Mahata , Vijayanand Suryakant Moholkar","doi":"10.1016/j.biombioe.2024.107452","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>Dark fermentation is an eco-friendly route for producing hydrogen, a clean next-generation fuel. The present study reports valorization of food waste to biohydrogen (bioH<sub>2</sub>) through dark fermentation using <em>Clostridium pasteurianum</em>. The optimization of fermentation parameters using response surface methodology (RSM) with central composite design (CCD) resulted in bioH<sub>2</sub> yield = 1039 mL/L (1.58 mol/mol hexose sugars) for the conditions: pH = 6.5, temperature = 36 °C, TRS concentration = 10 g/L. An artificial neural network coupled with a genetic algorithm (ANN-GA) predicted the optimum parameter set as pH = 6.7, temperature = 36.8 °C, TRS concentration = 10.85 g/L. A bioH<sub>2</sub> yield of 1108 mL/L (1.73 mol/mol hexose sugar) was obtained for these conditions. The modified Gompertz model revealed a maximum bioH<sub>2</sub> production rate of 185.34 mL/L·h for ANN-GA conditions as compared to 153.74 mL/L·h for RSM-CCD predicted conditions. Fermentation at ANN-GA-predicted conditions revealed greater shift of metabolic intermediates towards acetic acid/butyric acid pathway, resulting in higher bioH<sub>2</sub> production. The ratio of acetic to butyric acid increased from 0.9 to 0.94, indicating metabolic shift favoring bioH<sub>2</sub> production. These results demonstrate superiority of ANN-GA technique for simulating behavior of a non-linear system like the metabolic pathway of <em>C. pasteurianum</em>.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":253,"journal":{"name":"Biomass & Bioenergy","volume":"191 ","pages":"Article 107452"},"PeriodicalIF":5.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Biomass & Bioenergy","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0961953424004057","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Dark fermentation is an eco-friendly route for producing hydrogen, a clean next-generation fuel. The present study reports valorization of food waste to biohydrogen (bioH2) through dark fermentation using Clostridium pasteurianum. The optimization of fermentation parameters using response surface methodology (RSM) with central composite design (CCD) resulted in bioH2 yield = 1039 mL/L (1.58 mol/mol hexose sugars) for the conditions: pH = 6.5, temperature = 36 °C, TRS concentration = 10 g/L. An artificial neural network coupled with a genetic algorithm (ANN-GA) predicted the optimum parameter set as pH = 6.7, temperature = 36.8 °C, TRS concentration = 10.85 g/L. A bioH2 yield of 1108 mL/L (1.73 mol/mol hexose sugar) was obtained for these conditions. The modified Gompertz model revealed a maximum bioH2 production rate of 185.34 mL/L·h for ANN-GA conditions as compared to 153.74 mL/L·h for RSM-CCD predicted conditions. Fermentation at ANN-GA-predicted conditions revealed greater shift of metabolic intermediates towards acetic acid/butyric acid pathway, resulting in higher bioH2 production. The ratio of acetic to butyric acid increased from 0.9 to 0.94, indicating metabolic shift favoring bioH2 production. These results demonstrate superiority of ANN-GA technique for simulating behavior of a non-linear system like the metabolic pathway of C. pasteurianum.
期刊介绍:
Biomass & Bioenergy is an international journal publishing original research papers and short communications, review articles and case studies on biological resources, chemical and biological processes, and biomass products for new renewable sources of energy and materials.
The scope of the journal extends to the environmental, management and economic aspects of biomass and bioenergy.
Key areas covered by the journal:
• Biomass: sources, energy crop production processes, genetic improvements, composition. Please note that research on these biomass subjects must be linked directly to bioenergy generation.
• Biological Residues: residues/rests from agricultural production, forestry and plantations (palm, sugar etc), processing industries, and municipal sources (MSW). Papers on the use of biomass residues through innovative processes/technological novelty and/or consideration of feedstock/system sustainability (or unsustainability) are welcomed. However waste treatment processes and pollution control or mitigation which are only tangentially related to bioenergy are not in the scope of the journal, as they are more suited to publications in the environmental arena. Papers that describe conventional waste streams (ie well described in existing literature) that do not empirically address ''new'' added value from the process are not suitable for submission to the journal.
• Bioenergy Processes: fermentations, thermochemical conversions, liquid and gaseous fuels, and petrochemical substitutes
• Bioenergy Utilization: direct combustion, gasification, electricity production, chemical processes, and by-product remediation
• Biomass and the Environment: carbon cycle, the net energy efficiency of bioenergy systems, assessment of sustainability, and biodiversity issues.