Comparison of Various Reducing Agents for Methane Production by Methanothermobacter marburgensis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. State of the Art
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Chemicals and Gases
3.2. Growth Medium
3.3. Setup Preparation
3.3.1. Parameter Experiment (PE)
- Culture preparation
- (a)
- The medium was prepared in a 1 L bottle according to Table 2, before being sealed and flushed with argon for 10 min. The bottle was then stored inside the AC.
- (b)
- Seven serum bottles were sterilized by autoclaving (121 °C, 2 bar) for 20 min and then placed in the AC.
- (c)
- As a starter, an inoculation culture (IC) was previously cultured in a glass bottle, incubated until fully grown (OD600 = 0.15) and placed in the AC before use. It should be noted that the IC temperature should be room temperature.
- (d)
- The medium was filled in the serum bottles. Before adding IC, a 50 g/L Na2S·9 H2O stock solution was added to each bottle (1:100) and shaken to completely reduce the medium.
- (e)
- IC was added and a magnetic stirrer rod was placed in each bottle. The bottles were sealed with a rubber stopper and ejected from the AC. The pH was not adjusted. The ratio of IC and medium was 1:2. The suspension volume was altered for each sub-experiment.
- (f)
- With a special gas distribution station, the bottles were vacuumed (Vacuubrand VP 100 C) to 300 mbar and pressurized with the 80/20 hydrogen/carbon dioxide mixture. This routine was repeated two more times and the final pressure in the bottles was adjusted to a value of 5 bar absolute.
- Sub-experiment
- (a)
- Six of the seven bottles were placed on the magnetic stirrer inside the incubator, and one bottle was placed non-agitated as a control sample. The agitation speed was adjusted for each sub-experiment.
- (b)
- The pressure of one random agitated bottle was recorded.
- (c)
- The bottles were incubated for 3 h at 63 °C and then the pressure of each bottle was measured directly after removal from the incubator at incubation temperature.
- (d)
- For the next batch, step 1f was repeated.
3.3.2. Reducing Agent Experiment (RE)
3.4. Measurement Methods
3.5. Calculation of the Methane Evolution Rate
4. Results
4.1. Parameter Experiment
4.1.1. Influence of Agitation Speed and Suspension Volume
4.1.2. Cultivation Duration
4.2. Reducing Agent Experiment
4.2.1. Reducing Mechanism
4.2.2. Comparison of Different Reducing Agents
4.2.3. MER Change during Batch Progress
4.2.4. pH and Redox Potential
5. Discussion
5.1. Cultivation Conditions
5.2. Usage of Reducing Agents
- A lower reducing agent concentration performed better than a higher concentration. Surprisingly, 0.5 g/L sodium sulfide performed poorly, although it is the state of the art to use this reducing agent and concentration.
- The MER remained stable in several batches with the use of sodium dithionite, compared to sodium sulfide, which decreases over time. This could also be related to the high redox potential of sodium dithonite and the chemical stability in an alkaline or neutral solution for several weeks, as stated by Telfeyan et al. [35].
- pH and redox potential showed that the medium used is well buffered to maintain a longer incubation time. However, a medium change is needed due to the formation and overload of surface-active metabolites, such as proteins that lead to foam formation, especially for bubble-column bioreactors [36].
- For sodium sulfide and sodium dithionite, a precipitate was observed, which sedimented in the bottles. This could be related to the high redox potential of both reducing agents. This high potential may lead to the binding of oxygen from functional groups or salts. However, a correlation between MER change and precipitation could not be drawn, but it may be that the high redox potential has influence on the organisms.
- Overall, sodium dithionite and L-Cysteine-HCl performed similarly with respect to MER, which was also observed by Mylroie et al. [11]. However, the redox potential of sodium dithionite is higher and does not influence the pH level as much as L-Cys-HCl. Furthermore, the reducing time of L-Cys-HCl is very high compared to sodium dithionite, which leads to a waiting time before the inoculum can be added to the medium.
- The use of resazurin can be omitted because the redox potential stays at the same stage after several batches. As the medium is frequently changed, it is ensured that the redox potential remains at this level.
- Sodium dithionite is a much more sustainable and non-toxic chemical (H251, H302) than sodium sulfide (H302, H311, H314, H400). Furthermore, sodium dithionite reduces much faster than sodium sulfide and therefore allows faster process setup and a shorter delay period, which was also observed by Widdel et al. [19].
5.3. Economic Considerations
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Chemical | Concentration | E0 [mV] | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Na2S·9H2O | 0.25–0.50 g/L | −243 /−571 | [15,16] , [17] |
Cysteine/Cystine | 0.25–0.50 g/L | −325 /−340 | [15,16,18] , [17] |
2 Sulfit2−/Dithionite2− | 10–30 mg/L | −574 | [18,19] |
Dehydroascorbate/Ascorbate | 0.50–1.0 g/L | +58 | [15,16,17,18] |
Dithiothreitol | 1 mM, 0.1–0.5 g/L | −330 | [17,18,20] |
FeS (amorphous hydrated) | 11 µg/mL | −270 | [15,21] |
Sulfite (SO4/SO3) | −516 | [16,22] | |
Dithioglycolate/Thioglycolate | 0.50–1.0 g/L | −140 | [15,16,17,18] |
Titanium(III)citrate | 1–4 mM | −480 | [15,23,24] |
H2 (PdCl2) | Variable | −413 | [15] |
Component | Amount | Unit |
---|---|---|
NH4Cl | 2.1 | g/L |
K2HPO4 | 6.8 | g/L |
TES | 1 | mL/L |
Na-resazurin solution (0.1% w/v) | 0.5 | mL/L |
1 M Na2CO3 solution | 6 | mL/L |
Volume (mL) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
60 | 80 | 100 | ||
Agitation speed (rpm) | 600 | 4 (24 + 4) | 4 (24 + 4) | 4 (24 + 4) |
800 | 7 (42 + 7) | 4 (24 + 4) | 3 (18 + 3) | |
1000 | 5 (30 + 5) | 3 (18 + 3) | 3 (18 + 3) |
Volume [mL] | |||
---|---|---|---|
60 | 80 | 100 | |
control | 0.357 ± 0.217 (n = 16) | 0.530 ± 0.106 (n = 11) | 0.333 ± 0.046 (n = 10) |
600 rpm | 2.991 ± 0.203 (n = 24) | 2.370 ± 0.094 (n = 24) | 1.328 ± 0.041 (n = 24) |
800 rpm | 3.382 ± 0.419 (n = 42) | 2.681 ± 0.307 (n = 24) | 1.473 ± 0.042 (n = 18) |
1000 rpm | 2.473 ± 0.318 (n = 18) | 3.040 ± 0.073 (n = 18) | 1.528 ± 0.003 (n = 18) |
Median MER values with upper and lower limits in brackets (mmol·L−1 ·h−1) | |||
---|---|---|---|
0.5 g/L | 0.25 g/L | 0.1 g/L | |
3.459 (3.844, 2.799) | 3.833 (3.976, 3.708) | 3.855 (3.961, 3.389) | |
2.484 (3.092, 2.125) | 3.884 (4.162, 3.452) | 3.649 (4.074, 2.997) | |
L-Cys-HCl | 3.679 (3.961, 3.540) | 1.774 (2.667, 1.352) | 3.847 (3.972, 3.704) |
Control median MER values with upper and lower limits in brackets (mmol·Lh) | |||
0.5 g/L | 0.25 g/L | 0.1 g/L | |
0.542 (0.799, 0.279) | 0.396 (0.572, 0.366) | 0.249 (0.366, 0.059) | |
0.249 (0.264, 0.176) | 0.191 (0.352, 0.073) | 0.322 (0.440, 0.161) | |
L-Cys-HCl | 0.352 (0.791, 0.322) | 0.337 (0.396, 0.220) | 0.425 (0.542, 0.234) |
Sodium Dithionite (≥95%) | Sodium Sulfide (≥98%) | L-Cysteine-HCl (≥98%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Sigma-Aldrich | EUR 60.6 (1065051000) | EUR 126.4 (S2006-500G) | EUR 597 (C7880-1KG) |
VWR | EUR 60.6 (1.06505.1000) | EUR 166 (36622.A1) | EUR 466 (1.02839.1000) |
FisherScientific | EUR 69.56 (10274490) | EUR 132.2 (10587952) | EUR 488.8 (11478643) |
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Mock, M.P.; Ochi, R.; Bieringer, M.; Bieringer, T.; Brotsack, R.; Leyer, S. Comparison of Various Reducing Agents for Methane Production by Methanothermobacter marburgensis. Microorganisms 2023, 11, 2533. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11102533
Mock MP, Ochi R, Bieringer M, Bieringer T, Brotsack R, Leyer S. Comparison of Various Reducing Agents for Methane Production by Methanothermobacter marburgensis. Microorganisms. 2023; 11(10):2533. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11102533
Chicago/Turabian StyleMock, Maximilian Peter, Rayen Ochi, Maria Bieringer, Tim Bieringer, Raimund Brotsack, and Stephan Leyer. 2023. "Comparison of Various Reducing Agents for Methane Production by Methanothermobacter marburgensis" Microorganisms 11, no. 10: 2533. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11102533
APA StyleMock, M. P., Ochi, R., Bieringer, M., Bieringer, T., Brotsack, R., & Leyer, S. (2023). Comparison of Various Reducing Agents for Methane Production by Methanothermobacter marburgensis. Microorganisms, 11(10), 2533. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11102533