AI Article Synopsis

  • Ammonia inhibition significantly impacts anaerobic digestion, particularly affecting the degradation of acetic and propionic acids, while butyric acid remains relatively unaffected.
  • Three continuous stirred tank reactors (CSTRs) were tested with varying concentrations of ammonium bicarbonate to analyze the degradation efficiencies of these volatile fatty acids (VFAs).
  • The experiment revealed that while butyric acid degradation was stable, propionic acid was more significantly inhibited than acetic acid, leading to shifts in microbial communities that were tracked using advanced genetic sequencing methods.

Article Abstract

Ammonia inhibition is an important reason for reactor failures and economic losses in anaerobic digestion. Its impact on acetic acid degradation is well-studied, while its effect on propionic and butyric acid degradation has received little attention and is consequently not considered in the Anaerobic Digestion Model No. 1 (ADM1). To compare ammonia inhibition of the degradation of these three volatile fatty acids (VFAs), we fed a mixture of them as sole carbon source to three continuous stirred tank reactors (CSTRs) and increased ammonium bicarbonate concentrations in the influent from 52 to 277 mM. The use of this synthetic substrate allowed for the determination of degradation efficiencies for the individual acids. While butyric acid degradation was hardly affected by the increase of ammonia concentration, propionic acid degradation turned out to be even more inhibited than acetic acid degradation with degradation efficiencies dropping to 31 and 65% for propionic and acetic acid, respectively. The inhibited reactors acclimatized and approximated pre-disturbance degradation efficiencies toward the end of the experiment, which was accompanied by strong microbial community shifts, as observed by amplicon sequencing of 16S rRNA genes and terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) of genes. The acetoclastic methanogen was completely replaced by . The propionic acid degrading genus was replaced by yet unknown propionic acid degraders. The butyric acid degrading genus and hydrogenotrophic were hardly affected. We hypothesized that the ammonia sensitivity of the initially dominating taxa and led to a stronger inhibition of the acetic and propionic acid degradation compared to butyric acid degradation and hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis, which were facilitated by the ammonia tolerant taxa and . We implemented this hypothesis into a multi-taxa extension of ADM1, which was able to simulate the dynamics of both microbial community composition and VFA concentration in the experiment. It is thus plausible that the effect of ammonia on VFA degradation strongly depends on the ammonia sensitivity of the dominating taxa, for syntrophic propionate degraders as much as for acetoclastic methanogens.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6284035PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.02921DOI Listing

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