Publication

Carboxylic acids production and electrosynthetic microbial community evolution under different CO2 feeding regimes

Dessì, Paolo
Sánchez, Carlos
Mills, Simon
Cocco, Francesco Giuseppe
Isipato, Marco
Ijaz, Umer Z.
Collins, Gavin
Lens, Piet N.L.
Citation
Dessì, Paolo, Sánchez, Carlos, Mills, Simon, Cocco, Francesco Giuseppe, Isipato, Marco, Ijaz, Umer Z., Collins, Gavin, Lens, Piet N. L. (2021). Carboxylic acids production and electrosynthetic microbial community evolution under different CO2 feeding regimens. Bioelectrochemistry, 137, 107686. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bioelechem.2020.107686
Abstract
Microbial electrosynthesis (MES) is a potential technology for CO2 recycling, but insufficient information is available on the microbial interactions underpinning electrochemically-assisted reactions. In this study, a MES reactor was operated for 225 days alternately with bicarbonate or CO2 as carbon source, under batch or continuous feeding regimens, to evaluate the response of the microbial communities, and their productivity, to dynamic operating conditions. A stable acetic acid production rate of 9.68 g m-2 d-1, and coulombic efficiency up to 40%, was achieved with continuous CO2 sparging, higher than the rates obtained with bicarbonate (0.94 g m-2 d-1) and CO2 under fed-batch conditions (2.54 g m-2 d-1). However, the highest butyric acid production rate (0.39 g m-2 d-1) was achieved with intermittent CO2 sparging. The microbial community analyses focused on differential amplicon sequence variants (ASVs), allowing detection of ASVs significantly different across consecutive samples. This analysis, combined with co-occurence network analysis, and cyclic voltammetry, indicated that hydrogen-mediated acetogenesis was carried out by Clostridium, Eubacterium and Acetobacterium, whereas Oscillibacter and Caproiciproducens were involved in butyric acid production. The cathodic community was spatially inhomogeneous, with potential electrotrophs, such as Sulfurospirillum and Desulfovibrio, most prevalent near the current collector. The abundance of Sulfurospirillum positively correlated with that of Acetobacterium, supporting the syntrophic metabolism of both organisms.
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.bioelechem.2020.107686
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland