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Keywords = microbial methanogenic system

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17 pages, 2147 KiB  
Article
Enhancing Methanogenic Efficiency in Dry Anaerobic Digestion of Kitchen Waste Through Optimization of Total Solids Content
by Lan Liu, Jiaxi Zheng and Jianwei Liu
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2332; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082332 - 23 Jul 2025
Abstract
The urbanization-driven surge in kitchen waste necessitates optimized dry anaerobic digestion (DAD; total solids > 15%). Despite its valorization potential, this technology requires efficiency improvements due to mass transfer constraints. This study evaluated TS effects (15%, 20%, or 25%) on methane production. The [...] Read more.
The urbanization-driven surge in kitchen waste necessitates optimized dry anaerobic digestion (DAD; total solids > 15%). Despite its valorization potential, this technology requires efficiency improvements due to mass transfer constraints. This study evaluated TS effects (15%, 20%, or 25%) on methane production. The TS = 20% system achieved peak cumulative methane yield (405.73 ± 11.71 mL/gVS), exceeding TS = 15% (348.09 ± 12.19 mL/gVS) and TS = 25% (293.08 ± 3.55 mL/gVS). This optimization was attributable to synergistic maintenance of metabolic equilibrium through autonomous pH recovery, rapid VFAs degradation, and enhanced TAN tolerance. Conversely, TS = 25% exhibited impaired mass transfer efficiency under high solids, causing VFAs accumulation, ammonia toxicity, and progressive pH decline to 7.5, indicating system destabilization. Organic degradation analysis confirmed superior conversion efficiency in TS = 20% through dynamic SPS–SPN equilibrium. Microbial analysis revealed enhanced metabolic efficiency via synergistic interactions between acetoclastic and hydrogenotrophic methanogens in TS = 20%. This research provides technical parameters for optimizing methane production in kitchen waste DAD systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental and Green Processes)
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18 pages, 29742 KiB  
Article
Enhanced Oilfield-Produced-Water Treatment Using Fe3+-Augmented Composite Bioreactor: Performance and Microbial Community Dynamics
by Qiushi Zhao, Chunmao Chen, Zhongxi Chen, Hongman Shan and Jiahao Liang
Bioengineering 2025, 12(7), 784; https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering12070784 - 19 Jul 2025
Viewed by 295
Abstract
The presence of recalcitrant organic compounds in oilfield-produced-water poses significant challenges for conventional biological treatment technologies. In this study, an Fe3+-augmented composite bioreactor was developed to enhance the multi-pollutant removal performance and to elucidate the associated microbial community dynamics. The Fe [...] Read more.
The presence of recalcitrant organic compounds in oilfield-produced-water poses significant challenges for conventional biological treatment technologies. In this study, an Fe3+-augmented composite bioreactor was developed to enhance the multi-pollutant removal performance and to elucidate the associated microbial community dynamics. The Fe3+-augmented system achieved efficient removal of oil (99.18 ± 0.91%), suspended solids (65.81 ± 17.55%), chemical oxygen demand (48.63 ± 15.15%), and polymers (57.72 ± 14.87%). The anaerobic compartment served as the core biotreatment unit, playing a pivotal role in microbial pollutant degradation. High-throughput sequencing indicated that Fe3+ supplementation strengthened syntrophic interactions between iron-reducing bacteria (Trichococcus and Bacillus) and methanogenic archaea (Methanobacterium and Methanomethylovorans), thereby facilitating the biodegradation of long-chain hydrocarbons (e.g., eicosane and nonadecane). Further metabolic function analysis identified long-chain-fatty-acid CoA ligase (EC 6.2.1.3) as a key enzyme mediating the interplay between hydrocarbon degradation and nitrogen cycling. This study elucidated the ecological mechanisms governing Fe3+-mediated multi-pollutant removal in a composite bioreactor and highlighted the potential of this approach for efficient, sustainable, and adaptable management of produced water in the petroleum industry. Full article
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20 pages, 6259 KiB  
Article
Remediation Effects of Potamogeton crispus on Nitrogen-Loaded Water Bodies and Its Greenhouse Gas Emission Mechanisms
by Xiaoyi Li, Xiaoxiu Lun, Jianzhi Niu, Lumin Zhang, Bo Wu and Xinyue Wang
Atmosphere 2025, 16(7), 803; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16070803 - 1 Jul 2025
Viewed by 208
Abstract
Potamogeton crispus (P. crispus), with strong nitrogen uptake capacity, plays an important ecological role during winter and early spring when most aquatic plants are inactive. Its presence can also influence microbial denitrification in sediments by regulating oxygen levels and organic carbon [...] Read more.
Potamogeton crispus (P. crispus), with strong nitrogen uptake capacity, plays an important ecological role during winter and early spring when most aquatic plants are inactive. Its presence can also influence microbial denitrification in sediments by regulating oxygen levels and organic carbon availability. In this study, an indoor hydroponic simulation system was used to systematically evaluate the effects of P. crispus under different nitrogen-loading conditions on nitrogen removal from water, changes in sediment carbon and nitrogen fractions, microbial community structure, and greenhouse gas fluxes. The results showed that P. crispus effectively removed TN, NH4+-N, NO3-N, and NO2-N, maintaining strong denitrification capacity even under high-nitrogen loading. Under all nitrogen conditions, TN removal exceeded 80%, while NH4+-N and NO3-N removal efficiencies surpassed 90%, with effective suppression of NO2-N accumulation. Rhizosphere-mediated regulation by P. crispus enhanced the transformation and stabilization of DOC and NO3-N in sediments, while also mitigating nitrogen-induced disturbances to carbon–nitrogen balance. The plant also exhibited strong CO2 uptake capacity, low CH4 emissions with a slight increase under higher nitrogen loading, and N2O fluxes that were significantly affected by nitrogen levels—showing negative values under low nitrogen and sharp increases under high-nitrogen conditions. Correlation analyses indicated that CO2 and N2O emissions were mainly regulated by microbial taxa involved in carbon and nitrogen transformation, while CH4 emissions were primarily driven by methanogenic archaea and showed weaker correlations with environmental factors. These findings highlight the importance of water restoration during low-temperature seasons and provide a theoretical basis for integrated wetland management strategies aimed at coordinated pollution reduction and carbon mitigation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Interactions of Urban Greenings and Air Pollution)
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27 pages, 5014 KiB  
Article
A Microbial Food Web Dynamics Under the Influence of Leachate Recirculation
by Fatema Ahmed Al Najim, Miled El Hajji and Bader Saad Alshammari
Mathematics 2025, 13(13), 2146; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13132146 - 30 Jun 2025
Viewed by 184
Abstract
The three-tiered microbial food chain without maintenance under leachate recirculation is the subject of a mathematical seven-dimensional dynamical system that is proposed in this work. This model captures the complex interactions between chlorophenol degraders, phenol degraders, and methanogens in the presence of hydrogen [...] Read more.
The three-tiered microbial food chain without maintenance under leachate recirculation is the subject of a mathematical seven-dimensional dynamical system that is proposed in this work. This model captures the complex interactions between chlorophenol degraders, phenol degraders, and methanogens in the presence of hydrogen inhibition. The implementation allows for investigation of how hydrogen levels affect the overall system dynamics and phenol production. There is a thorough qualitative analysis provided. A stability analysis of equilibrium points is performed. It is demonstrated that the persistence of the three bacteria is correlated with the existence of the positive equilibrium point, assuming some monotonicity properties on the growth rates. Asymptotic coexistence is satisfied, although periodic orbit possibilities are not ruled out. In order to decrease the amount of organic materials within the reactor, we suggest an optimal strategy on the rate of leachate recirculation in the second stage. Lastly, we offer a few numerical investigations that support and strengthen the theoretical conclusions. Full article
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15 pages, 1326 KiB  
Article
Experimental Study of Two-Stage Anaerobic Co-Digestion of Corn Steep Liquor and Agricultural Wastes for Hydrogen and Methane Production Including Metagenomics
by Elena Chorukova, Galina Stoyancheva and Lyudmila Kabaivanova
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(13), 7076; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15137076 - 23 Jun 2025
Viewed by 308
Abstract
This study investigated the dynamics and composition of microbial communities within the bioreactors of a two-stage anaerobic system employed for the bioconversion of corn steep liquor, a food processing byproduct, into hydrogen and methane. The high organic matter content of such wastes positions [...] Read more.
This study investigated the dynamics and composition of microbial communities within the bioreactors of a two-stage anaerobic system employed for the bioconversion of corn steep liquor, a food processing byproduct, into hydrogen and methane. The high organic matter content of such wastes positions them as valuable substrates for biotechnological applications. The two-stage anaerobic digestion (AD) process was compartmentalized into a hydrogen-producing bioreactor (3 dm3) and a methane-producing bioreactor (15 dm3), each harboring distinct microbial consortia. The system yielded a maximal hydrogen production of 1.02 L/day and a peak methane production of 24.1 L/day with substrate corn steep liquor and cattle manure in a ratio 1:1. Microbial consortia were recognized as critical drivers of AD performance and biofuel yield. This research demonstrated the efficacy of a two-stage approach, segregating the hydrogenic (hydrolysis and acidogenesis) and methanogenic (acetogenesis and methanogenesis) phases, for optimized energy recovery from the co-digestion of corn steep liquor and cattle manure under controlled conditions. Metagenomic sequencing and a subsequent bioinformatics analysis were utilized to characterize the microbial diversity within each bioreactors. These findings contribute to a deeper understanding of the microbial ecology of AD and hold the potential for broader applications in waste-to-energy bioconversion. Full article
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19 pages, 1200 KiB  
Article
Effects of Rice–Fish Coculture on Greenhouse Gas Emissions: A Case Study in Terraced Paddy Fields of Qingtian, China
by Qixuan Li, Lina Xie, Shiwei Lin, Xiangbing Cheng, Qigen Liu and Yalei Li
Agronomy 2025, 15(6), 1480; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy15061480 - 18 Jun 2025
Viewed by 468
Abstract
Rice–fish coculture, a traditional integrated agriculture–aquaculture system, has been recognized as a “Globally Important Agricultural Heritage System” due to its ecological and socio-economic benefits. However, the impact of rice–fish coculture on greenhouse gas emissions remains controversial. This study investigated the effects of rice–fish [...] Read more.
Rice–fish coculture, a traditional integrated agriculture–aquaculture system, has been recognized as a “Globally Important Agricultural Heritage System” due to its ecological and socio-economic benefits. However, the impact of rice–fish coculture on greenhouse gas emissions remains controversial. This study investigated the effects of rice–fish coculture on methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions in the Qingtian rice–fish system, a 1200-year-old terraced paddy field system in Zhejiang Province, China. A field experiment with two treatments, rice–fish coculture (RF) and rice monoculture (RM), was conducted to examine the relationships between fish activities, water and soil properties, microbial communities, and greenhouse gas fluxes. Results showed that the RF system had significantly higher CH4 emissions, particularly during the early rice growth stage, compared to the RM system. This increase was attributed to the lower dissolved oxygen levels and higher methanogen abundance in the RF system, likely driven by the grazing, “muddying”, and burrowing activities of fish. In contrast, no significant differences in N2O emissions were observed between the two systems. Redundancy analysis revealed that water variables contributed more to the variation in greenhouse gas emissions than soil variables. Microbial community analysis indicated that the RF system supported a more diverse microbial community involved in methane cycling processes. These findings provide new insights into the complex interactions between fish activities, environmental factors, and microbial communities in regulating greenhouse gas emissions from rice–fish coculture systems. The results suggest that optimizing water management strategies and exploring the potential of microbial community manipulation could help mitigate greenhouse gas emissions while maintaining the ecological and socio-economic benefits of these traditional integrated agriculture–aquaculture systems. Full article
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19 pages, 801 KiB  
Review
Microplastics, Antibiotics, and Heavy Metals in Anaerobic Digestion Systems: A Critical Review of Sources, Impacts, and Mitigation Strategies
by Hongbo Liu, Xiang Yuan, Yuxuan Yao, Lijin Yao, Junbo Zhang and Claudia Maurer
Recycling 2025, 10(3), 116; https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling10030116 - 12 Jun 2025
Viewed by 1938
Abstract
The widespread implementation of anaerobic digestion (AD) systems for organic waste treatment is increasingly challenged by emerging contaminants, including microplastics (MPs), antibiotics, and heavy metals (HMs), which exhibit environmental persistence and pose risks to ecological and human health. This review critically examines the [...] Read more.
The widespread implementation of anaerobic digestion (AD) systems for organic waste treatment is increasingly challenged by emerging contaminants, including microplastics (MPs), antibiotics, and heavy metals (HMs), which exhibit environmental persistence and pose risks to ecological and human health. This review critically examines the sources, transformation pathways, and advanced mitigation strategies for these contaminants within AD systems. MPs, primarily derived from fragmented plastics and personal care products, accumulate in digestates and act as vectors for adsorbing toxic additives and pathogens. Antibiotics, introduced via livestock manure and wastewater, exert selective pressures that propagate antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) while disrupting methanogenic consortia. HMs, originating from industrial and agricultural activities, impair microbial activity through bioaccumulation and enzymatic interference, with their bioavailability modulated by speciation shifts during digestion. To combat these challenges, promising mitigation approaches include the following: (1) bioaugmentation with specialized microbial consortia to enhance contaminant degradation and stabilize HMs; (2) thermal hydrolysis pretreatment to break down MPs and antibiotic residues; (3) chemical passivation using biochar or sulfides to immobilize HMs. Co-digestion practices inadvertently concentrate these contaminants, with MPs and HMs predominantly partitioning into solid phases, while antibiotics persist in both liquid and solid fractions. These findings highlight the urgency of optimizing mitigation strategies to minimize contaminant mobility and toxicity. However, critical knowledge gaps persist regarding the long-term impacts of biodegradable MPs, antibiotic transformation byproducts, and standardized regulatory thresholds for contaminant residues in digestate. This synthesis underscores the necessity for integrated engineering solutions and policy frameworks to ensure the safe resource recovery from AD systems, balancing energy production with environmental sustainability. Full article
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15 pages, 2365 KiB  
Review
Mofettes as Models for Basic Research on Soil and Rhizosphere Microbial Communities and Possible Applications of These Extreme Ecosystems
by Irena Maček
Environments 2025, 12(5), 166; https://doi.org/10.3390/environments12050166 - 17 May 2025
Viewed by 457
Abstract
Mofettes or natural CO2 springs release large amounts of geogenic CO2 at ambient temperature, leading to long-term soil hypoxia in these extreme ecosystems. Thus, they can serve as natural long-term experiments in ecology and evolution and other environmental studies, providing stable [...] Read more.
Mofettes or natural CO2 springs release large amounts of geogenic CO2 at ambient temperature, leading to long-term soil hypoxia in these extreme ecosystems. Thus, they can serve as natural long-term experiments in ecology and evolution and other environmental studies, providing stable long-term changes in abiotic factors that are most pronounced in mofette soils. This paper reviews basic research on rhizosphere processes, soil microbial communities, and microbial diversity in mofettes, focusing on reports describing the effects of altered soil gas regimes on root respiration and the diversity and community structure of archaea, bacteria, and fungi in soil. Furthermore, an insight into possible applications of mofette ecosystems is given. For more than 20 years, mofettes have provided new insights into the importance of long-term changes in abiotic environmental factors in regulating soil biodiversity, serving as a model for extreme ecosystems. Mofettes provide an innovative approach to the study of many ecological processes that occur slowly and, therefore, require extensive and lengthy observations and experiments, acting as a space-for-time substitution. Previous studies in mofettes around the world have determined plant responses to elevated CO2 concentrations over multiple generations, described new species of collembolans and yeasts, and identified stable patterns in microbial communities describing specific acidophilic and methanogenic consortia of soil archaea and bacteria, as well as stable communities of plant symbiotic arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. As the development of high-throughput molecular techniques has accelerated rapidly in the last decade, mofettes now serve more than ever as a natural long-term experimental system to study soil and rhizosphere ecology and contribute to further research on long-term ecological and evolutionary processes that are crucial for understanding past evolutionary events, managing future ecosystems, and predicting ecological responses to global change. Some recent developments target the specific geological and biological characteristics of these extreme ecosystems, including in terms of applications related to environmental impact assessment of carbon capture and storage systems, as well as conservation status, tourism, culture and education, i.e., broader ecosystem services of mofettes, which are addressed in this review together with basic research on soil biodiversity. Full article
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25 pages, 3531 KiB  
Article
The Meso- and Bathypelagic Archaeal and Bacterial Communities of the Southern Gulf of Mexico Are Dominated by Nitrifiers and Hydrocarbon Degraders
by Lizt Selene Osorio-Pando, Mario Hernández-Guzmán, Karla Sidón-Ceseña, Yamne Ortega-Saad, Victor F. Camacho-Ibar, Jennyfers Chong-Robles and Asunción Lago-Lestón
Microorganisms 2025, 13(5), 1106; https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms13051106 - 11 May 2025
Viewed by 785
Abstract
The Gulf of Mexico (GoM) is a complex oceanic basin with a maximum depth of 4000 m. It is a complex hydrodynamic system formed by different water masses with distinctive physical and biological characteristics that shape its rich biodiversity. In this study, as [...] Read more.
The Gulf of Mexico (GoM) is a complex oceanic basin with a maximum depth of 4000 m. It is a complex hydrodynamic system formed by different water masses with distinctive physical and biological characteristics that shape its rich biodiversity. In this study, as a contribution to better understanding the microbial communities inhabiting the meso- and bathypelagic zones of the Mexican Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of the GoM, an extensive set of seawater samples was collected at three depths (350–3700 m) during three oceanographic cruises. The V4-16S rRNA gene analysis identified Pseudomonadota (27.1 ± 9.8%) and Nitrosopumilales (26.4 ± 2.3%) as the dominant bacterial and archaeal members, respectively. The depth, salinity, and apparent oxygen utilization were key environmental drivers, which explained 35% of the community variability. The mesopelagic zone presented a more homogeneous structure characterized by a nitrifier community, while the bathypelagic was more heterogeneous, with hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria and methanogens serving as the key players. This study is the first to report the archaeal community in the deeper waters of the Mexican EEZ of the GoM, playing crucial roles in the nitrogen and carbon cycles, highlighting the region’s ecological complexity and the need for further research to understand the broader biogeochemical implications of these processes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Microbiology)
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28 pages, 1033 KiB  
Review
Methane Synthesis as a Source of Energy Loss Impacting Microbial Protein Synthesis in Beef Cattle—A Review
by Wilmer Cuervo, Camila Gomez-Lopez and Nicolas DiLorenzo
Methane 2025, 4(2), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/methane4020010 - 21 Apr 2025
Viewed by 1429
Abstract
Ruminal methanogenesis represents considerable energy loss within the fermentative processes mediated by microbial populations, by means of which up to 12% of gross energy intake is driven away from microbial protein synthesis (MPS). This review explores the relationship between methane (CH4) [...] Read more.
Ruminal methanogenesis represents considerable energy loss within the fermentative processes mediated by microbial populations, by means of which up to 12% of gross energy intake is driven away from microbial protein synthesis (MPS). This review explores the relationship between methane (CH4) synthesis and emission with MPS in beef cattle, focusing on the nutritional, biochemical, and microbial factors modulating these processes. The synthesis of CH4 by ruminal archaea is essential for maintaining redox balance during the fermentation of carbohydrates. This process diverts metabolic H2 from energy-efficient pathways like propionate synthesis, which could otherwise enhance microbial growth. Dietary factors, including carbohydrate fermentability, N synchronization, and passage rate, modulate MPS. Diets based on roughage might enhance CH4 synthesis while impairing MPS efficiency by reducing diet digestibility and promoting microbial shifts towards methanogenic populations. Potential mitigation strategies, including plant secondary metabolites, CH4 inhibitors, and controlled forage-to-concentrate ratios, demonstrate the potential to reduce CH4 emissions while enhancing nutrient utilization. This review underscores the need for integrated approaches combining dietary strategies, advanced feed additives, and improved prediction models to optimize ruminal fermentation, enhance MPS, and reduce the environmental footprint of beef cattle systems. Full article
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13 pages, 1244 KiB  
Article
Optimizing Hydrogen Production Through Efficient Organic Matter Oxidation Performed by Microbial Electrolysis Cells
by Angela Marchetti, Miriam Cerrillo Moreno, Roberto Lauri and Marco Zeppilli
Processes 2025, 13(4), 1231; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13041231 - 18 Apr 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 577
Abstract
Microbial electrolysis cells (MECs) represent a pioneering technology for sustainable hydrogen production by leveraging bioelectrochemical processes. This study investigates the performance of a single-chamber cathodic MEC, where a cation exchange membrane separates the electrically active bioanode from the cathode. The system was constantly [...] Read more.
Microbial electrolysis cells (MECs) represent a pioneering technology for sustainable hydrogen production by leveraging bioelectrochemical processes. This study investigates the performance of a single-chamber cathodic MEC, where a cation exchange membrane separates the electrically active bioanode from the cathode. The system was constantly fed with a synthetic carbonaceous solution, employing a working potential of +0.3 V vs. SHE and an organic loading rate of 2 gCOD/Ld with a hydraulic retention time of 0.3 d. Notably, no methanogenic activity was detected, likely due to the establishment of an alkaline pH in the cathodic chamber. Under these conditions, the system exhibited good performance, achieving a current density of approximately 115 A/m3 and a hydrogen production rate of 1.28 m3/m3d. The corresponding energy consumption for hydrogen production resulted in 6.32 kWh/Nm3 H2, resulting in a slightly higher energetic cost compared to conventional electrolysis; moreover, an average energy efficiency of 85% was reached during the steady-state condition. These results demonstrate the potential of MECs as an effective and sustainable approach for biohydrogen production by helping the development of greener energy solutions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Hydrogen Production Processes)
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19 pages, 1976 KiB  
Review
Review on Mechanisms of Iron Accelerants and Their Effects on Anaerobic Digestion
by Han Wang, Wanli Zhang, Wanli Xing and Rundong Li
Agriculture 2025, 15(7), 728; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15070728 - 28 Mar 2025
Viewed by 715
Abstract
Anaerobic digestion is an important technology for energy recovery from organic waste. However, methanogenesis is restricted by some barriers, such as the low-speed bottleneck of interspecies electron transfer (IET), the low hydrogen partial pressure limitation, trace element deficiency, etc., resulting in poor system [...] Read more.
Anaerobic digestion is an important technology for energy recovery from organic waste. However, methanogenesis is restricted by some barriers, such as the low-speed bottleneck of interspecies electron transfer (IET), the low hydrogen partial pressure limitation, trace element deficiency, etc., resulting in poor system stability and low methane production. Recently, multiple iron accelerants have been employed to overcome the above challenges and have been proven effective in enhancing methanogenesis. This study reviews the effects of iron accelerants (Fe0, Fe3O4 and magnetite, Fe2O3 and hematite, iron salts and other iron accelerants) on anaerobic digestion in terms of methane production, process stability and the microbial community and elaborates the mechanisms of iron accelerants in mediating the direct interspecies electron transfer (DIET) of the syntrophic methanogenic community, strong reducibility promoting methanogenesis, provision of nutrient elements for microorganisms, etc. The potential engineering application of iron accelerants in anaerobic digestion and the current research advances regarding the environmental impacts and the recovery of iron accelerants are also summarized. Although iron accelerants exhibit positive effects on anaerobic digestion, most of the current research focuses on laboratory and small-scale investigations, and its large-scale engineering application should be further verified. Future research should focus on elucidating the mechanisms of iron accelerants for enhancing anaerobic digestion, developing diverse application methods for different types of anaerobic systems, optimizing large-scale engineering applications, and exploring the environmental impacts and high-efficiency recovery strategies of iron accelerants. Full article
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15 pages, 1550 KiB  
Article
The Characteristics and Estimation of Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Urban Sewer Systems in Southern China
by Longjie Li, Yuou Sang, Xinyuan Wang, Tangfang Zhai, Chen Cai, Jilong Ren and Xiaona Ma
Sustainability 2025, 17(6), 2504; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17062504 - 12 Mar 2025
Viewed by 733
Abstract
Carbon emission fluxes in urban sewer systems and the microbial community structure in sewer sediments remain unclear. In this study, a sewer system located in southern China was utilized to investigate the water quality characteristics. The results showed that the chemical oxygen demand [...] Read more.
Carbon emission fluxes in urban sewer systems and the microbial community structure in sewer sediments remain unclear. In this study, a sewer system located in southern China was utilized to investigate the water quality characteristics. The results showed that the chemical oxygen demand loss rates in the branch pipe and sub-main pipe were 27.1% and 14.1%, respectively. The estimated carbon emission flux was estimated by the carbon emission factor method. The results revealed that the total carbon emission flux from the sewer system was 1.39 kg CO2-eq/m3 and the emission fluxes of methane and carbon dioxide were 0.87 kg CO2-eq/m3 and 0.51 kg CO2-eq/m3, accounting for 62% and 36.4%. The microbial community structure was analyzed by 16S rRNA. The results indicated that the methanogenic archaea in the sediments of the branch pipe and sub-main pipe were Methanobacterium, Methanosaeta, and Methanobrevibacter. The methanogenic activity of the sewer sediments was further assessed. This study further confirmed that the branch pipe and sub-main pipe were the main sources of carbon emissions and methane and carbon dioxide are the main greenhouse gases in the sewer system. This study furnishes novel insights for the control of carbon emissions in municipal sewage systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Water Management)
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19 pages, 4145 KiB  
Article
Enhanced Anaerobic Digestion Performance Through Acyl Homoserine Lactone-Mediated Quorum Sensing and Supplemental Voltage Regulation
by Jie Zhou, Mingxuan Xu, Diwen Cao, Shuhuan Li, Xiaorui Yang, Weiliang Dong, Honghua Jia and Xiayuan Wu
Fermentation 2025, 11(3), 117; https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation11030117 - 2 Mar 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 989
Abstract
Traditional anaerobic digestion (AD) technology continues to have severe limitations in terms of complicated substrate degradation efficiency and methane production. This study optimizes the AD system using corn straw and cattle manure as substrates by introducing an exogenous N-Hexanoyl-L-Homoserine lactone (C6-HSL) signaling molecule [...] Read more.
Traditional anaerobic digestion (AD) technology continues to have severe limitations in terms of complicated substrate degradation efficiency and methane production. This study optimizes the AD system using corn straw and cattle manure as substrates by introducing an exogenous N-Hexanoyl-L-Homoserine lactone (C6-HSL) signaling molecule in concert with an applied external voltage of 0.8 V, systematically investigating its impact on methanogenic performance and microbial community dynamics. The results show that the combined regulation significantly increased methane production (by 29.74%) and substrate utilization rate (by 74.73%) while preventing acid inhibition and ammonia nitrogen inhibition. Mechanistic analysis revealed that the external voltage enhanced the system’s electrocatalytic activity, while the C6-HSL signaling molecule further facilitated the electron transfer efficiency of the biofilm on the electrode. The combined regulation notably enriched hydrogenotrophic methanogens (with Methanobacterium predominating on the cathode and Methanobrevibacter in the digestate), establishing a stable metabolic cooperative network on both the electrode and in the digestate, optimizing the hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis pathway, and enhancing the synergistic effects among microbial communities and system robustness. This study uncovers the synergistic enhancement mechanism of C6-HSL and external voltage, providing new technological pathways and theoretical support for the efficient conversion of low-quality biomass resources and the production of clean energy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Industrial Fermentation)
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18 pages, 4037 KiB  
Article
Bioenergetic Modeling of the Relationship Between Voltage and Electroactive Microbial Biomass Yield for Bioelectrochemical Carbon Dioxide Reduction to Methane
by Vafa Ahmadi and Nabin Aryal
Fermentation 2025, 11(1), 40; https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation11010040 - 17 Jan 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1138
Abstract
Optimal product synthesis in bioelectrochemical systems (BESs) requires a comprehensive understanding of the relationship between external voltage and microbial yield. While most studies assume constant growth yields or rely on empirical estimates, this study presents a novel thermodynamic model, linking anodic oxidation and [...] Read more.
Optimal product synthesis in bioelectrochemical systems (BESs) requires a comprehensive understanding of the relationship between external voltage and microbial yield. While most studies assume constant growth yields or rely on empirical estimates, this study presents a novel thermodynamic model, linking anodic oxidation and cathodic carbon dioxide (CO2) reduction to methane (CH4) by growing microbial biofilm. Through integrating theoretical Gibbs free energy calculations, the model predicts electron and proton transfers for autotrophic methanogen and anode-respiring bacteria (ARB) growth, accounting for varying applied voltages and substrate concentrations. The findings identify an optimal applied cathodic potential of −0.3 V vs. the standard hydrogen electrode (SHE) for maximizing CH4 production under standard conditions (pH 7, 25 °C, 1 atm) regardless of ohmic losses. The model bridges the stoichiometry of anodic and cathodic biofilms, addressing research gaps in simulating anodic and cathodic biofilm growth simultaneously. Additionally, sensitivity analyses reveal that lower substrate concentrations require more negative voltages than standard condition to stimulate microbial growth. The model was validated using experimental data, demonstrating reasonable predictions of biomass growth and CH4 yield under different operating voltages in a multi substrate system. The results show that higher voltage inputs increase biomass yield while reducing CH4 output due to non-optimal voltage. This validated model provides a tool for optimizing BES performance to enhance CH4 recovery and biofilm stability. These insights contribute to finding optimum voltage for the highest CH4 production for energy efficient CO2 reduction for scaling up BES technology. Full article
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