首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
Perchlorate and chlorate are electron acceptors that during reduction result in the formation of molecular oxygen. The produced oxygen can be used for activation of anaerobic persistent pollutants, like benzene. In this study chlorate was tested as potential electron acceptor to stimulate benzene degradation in anoxic polluted soil column. A chlorate amended benzene polluted soil column was operated over a period of 500 days. Benzene was immediately degraded in the column after start up, and benzene removal recovered completely after omission of chlorate or a too high influent chlorate concentration (22 mM). Mass balance calculations showed that per mole of benzene five mole of chlorate were reduced. At the end of the experiment higher loading rates were applied to measure the maximal benzene degradation rate in this system; a breakthrough of benzene was not observed. The average benzene degradation rate over this period was 31 μmol l−1 h−1 with a maximal of 78 μmol l−1 h−1. The high degradation rate and the necessity of chlorate indicate that oxygen produced during chlorate reduction indeed is used for the activation of benzene. This is the first column study where benzene biodegradation at a high rate coupled with anaerobic chlorate reduction is observed.  相似文献   

2.
No hyperthermophilic microorganisms have previously been shown to anaerobically oxidize acetate, the key extracellular intermediate in the anaerobic oxidation of organic matter. Here we report that two hyperthermophiles, Ferroglobus placidus and “Geoglobus ahangari,” grow at 85°C by oxidizing acetate to carbon dioxide, with Fe(III) serving as the electron acceptor. These results demonstrate that acetate could potentially be metabolized within the hot microbial ecosystems in which hyperthermophiles predominate, rather than diffusing to cooler environments prior to degradation as has been previously proposed.  相似文献   

3.
Anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) coupled to nitrite reduction is a novel AOM process that is mediated by denitrifying methanotrophs. To date, enrichments of these denitrifying methanotrophs have been confined to freshwater systems; however, the recent findings of 16S rRNA and pmoA gene sequences in marine sediments suggest a possible occurrence of AOM coupled to nitrite reduction in marine systems. In this research, a marine denitrifying methanotrophic culture was obtained after 20 months of enrichment. Activity testing and quantitative PCR (qPCR) analysis were then conducted and showed that the methane oxidation activity and the number of NC10 bacteria increased correlatively during the enrichment period. 16S rRNA gene sequencing indicated that only bacteria in group A of the NC10 phylum were enriched and responsible for the resulting methane oxidation activity, although a diverse community of NC10 bacteria was harbored in the inoculum. Fluorescence in situ hybridization showed that NC10 bacteria were dominant in the enrichment culture after 20 months. The effect of salinity on the marine denitrifying methanotrophic culture was investigated, and the apparent optimal salinity was 20.5‰, which suggested that halophilic bacterial AOM coupled to nitrite reduction was obtained. Moreover, the apparent substrate affinity coefficients of the halophilic denitrifying methanotrophs were determined to be 9.8 ± 2.2 μM for methane and 8.7 ± 1.5 μM for nitrite.  相似文献   

4.
Anaerobic Benzene Biodegradation Linked to Nitrate Reduction   总被引:9,自引:1,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Benzene oxidation to carbon dioxide linked to nitrate reduction was observed in enrichment cultures developed from soil and groundwater microcosms. Benzene biodegradation occurred concurrently with nitrate reduction at a constant ratio of 10 mol of nitrate consumed per mol of benzene degraded. Benzene biodegradation linked to nitrate reduction was associated with cell growth; however, the yield, 8.8 g (dry weight) of cells per mol of benzene, was less than 15% of the predicted yield for benzene biodegradation linked to nitrate reduction. In experiments performed with [14C]benzene, approximately 92 to 95% of the label was recovered in 14CO2, while the remaining 5 to 8% was incorporated into the nonvolatile fraction (presumably biomass), which is consistent with the low measured yield. In benzene-degrading cultures, nitrite accumulated stoichiometrically as nitrate was reduced and then was slowly reduced to nitrogen gas. When nitrate was depleted and only nitrite remained, the rate of benzene degradation decreased to almost zero. Based on electron balances, benzene biodegradation appears to be coupled more tightly to nitrate reduction to nitrite than to further reduction of nitrite to nitrogen gas.  相似文献   

5.
In the global nitrogen cycle, bacterial denitrification is recognized as the only quantitatively important process that converts fixed nitrogen to atmospheric nitrogen gas, N2, thereby influencing many aspects of ecosystem function and global biogeochemistry. However, we have found that a process novel to the marine nitrogen cycle, anaerobic oxidation of ammonium coupled to nitrate reduction, contributes substantially to N2 production in marine sediments. Incubations with 15N-labeled nitrate or ammonium demonstrated that during this process, N2 is formed through one-to-one pairing of nitrogen from nitrate and ammonium, which clearly separates the process from denitrification. Nitrite, which accumulated transiently, was likely the oxidant for ammonium, and the process is thus similar to the anammox process known from wastewater bioreactors. Anaerobic ammonium oxidation accounted for 24 and 67% of the total N2 production at two typical continental shelf sites, whereas it was detectable but insignificant relative to denitrification in a eutrophic coastal bay. However, rates of anaerobic ammonium oxidation were higher in the coastal sediment than at the deepest site and the variability in the relative contribution to N2 production between sites was related to large differences in rates of denitrification. Thus, the relative importance of anaerobic ammonium oxidation and denitrification in N2 production appears to be regulated by the availability of their reduced substrates. By shunting nitrogen directly from ammonium to N2, anaerobic ammonium oxidation promotes the removal of fixed nitrogen in the oceans. The process can explain ammonium deficiencies in anoxic waters and sediments, and it may contribute significantly to oceanic nitrogen budgets.  相似文献   

6.
We characterized the arsenate-reducing, sulfide-oxidizing population of Mono Lake, California, by analyzing the distribution and diversity of rrnA, cbbL, and dissimilatory arsenate reductase (arrA) genes in environmental DNA, arsenate-plus sulfide-amended lake water, mixed cultures, and isolates. The arsenate-reducing community was diverse. An organism represented by an rrnA sequence previously retrieved from Mono Lake and affiliated with the Desulfobulbaceae (Deltaproteobacteria) appears to be an important member of the arsenate-reducing, sulfide-oxidizing community. Sulfide oxidation coupled with arsenate reduction appears to proceed via a two-electron transfer, resulting in the production of arsenite and an intermediate S compound that is subsequently disproportionated. A realgar-like As/S mineral was formed in some experiments.  相似文献   

7.
The ability of Alteromonas putrefaciens to obtain energy for growth by coupling the oxidation of various electron donors to dissimilatory Fe(III) or Mn(IV) reduction was investigated. A. putrefaciens grew with hydrogen, formate, lactate, or pyruvate as the sole electron donor and Fe(III) as the sole electron acceptor. Lactate and pyruvate were oxidized to acetate, which was not metabolized further. With Fe(III) as the electron acceptor, A. putrefaciens had a high affinity for hydrogen and formate and metabolized hydrogen at partial pressures that were 25-fold lower than those of hydrogen that can be metabolized by pure cultures of sulfate reducers or methanogens. The electron donors for Fe(III) reduction also supported Mn(IV) reduction. The electron donors for Fe(III) and Mn(IV) reduction and the inability of A. putrefaciens to completely oxidize multicarbon substrates to carbon dioxide distinguish A. putrefaciens from GS-15, the only other organism that is known to obtain energy for growth by coupling the oxidation of organic compounds to the reduction of Fe(III) or Mn(IV). The ability of A. putrefaciens to reduce large quantities of Fe(III) and to grow in a defined medium distinguishes it from a Pseudomonas sp., which is the only other known hydrogen-oxidizing, Fe(III)-reducing microorganism. Furthermore, A. putrefaciens is the first organism that is known to grow with hydrogen as the electron donor and Mn(IV) as the electron acceptor and is the first organism that is known to couple the oxidation of formate to the reduction of Fe(III) or Mn(IV). Thus, A. putrefaciens provides a much needed microbial model for key reactions in the oxidation of sediment organic matter coupled to Fe(III) and Mn(IV) reduction.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of low substrate concentrations on the metabolic pathway and sulfur isotope fractionation during sulfate reduction was investigated for Archaeoglobus fulgidus strain Z. This archaeon was grown in a chemostat with sulfate concentrations between 0.3 mM and 14 mM at 80°C and with lactate as the limiting substrate. During sulfate reduction, lactate was oxidized to acetate, formate, and CO2. This is the first time that the production of formate has been reported for A. fulgidus. The stoichiometry of the catabolic reaction was strongly dependent on the sulfate concentration. At concentrations of more than 300 μM, 1 mol of sulfate was reduced during the consumption of 1 mol of lactate, whereas only 0.6 mol of sulfate was consumed per mol of lactate oxidized at a sulfate concentration of 300 μM. Furthermore, at low sulfate concentrations acetate was the main carbon product, in contrast to the CO2 produced at high concentrations. We suggest different pathways for lactate oxidation by A. fulgidus at high and low sulfate concentrations. At about 300 μM sulfate both the growth yield and the isotope fractionation were limited by sulfate, whereas the sulfate reduction rate was not limited by sulfate. We suggest that the cell channels more energy for sulfate uptake at sulfate concentrations below 300 to 400 μM than it does at higher concentrations. This could explain the shift in the metabolic pathway and the reduced growth yield and isotope fractionation at low sulfate levels.  相似文献   

9.
The abundance of Geobacter species in contaminated aquifers in which benzene is anaerobically degraded has led to the suggestion that some Geobacter species might be capable of anaerobic benzene degradation, but this has never been documented. A strain of Geobacter, designated strain Ben, was isolated from sediments from the Fe(III)-reducing zone of a petroleum-contaminated aquifer in which there was significant capacity for anaerobic benzene oxidation. Strain Ben grew in a medium with benzene as the sole electron donor and Fe(III) oxide as the sole electron acceptor. Furthermore, additional evaluation of Geobacter metallireducens demonstrated that it could also grow in benzene-Fe(III) medium. In both strain Ben and G. metallireducens the stoichiometry of benzene metabolism and Fe(III) reduction was consistent with the oxidation of benzene to carbon dioxide with Fe(III) serving as the sole electron acceptor. With benzene as the electron donor, and Fe(III) oxide (strain Ben) or Fe(III) citrate (G. metallireducens) as the electron acceptor, the cell yields of strain Ben and G. metallireducens were 3.2 × 109 and 8.4 × 109 cells/mmol of Fe(III) reduced, respectively. Strain Ben also oxidized benzene with anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS) as the sole electron acceptor with cell yields of 5.9 × 109 cells/mmol of AQDS reduced. Strain Ben serves as model organism for the study of anaerobic benzene metabolism in petroleum-contaminated aquifers, and G. metallireducens is the first anaerobic benzene-degrading organism that can be genetically manipulated.  相似文献   

10.
The microzonation of O2 respiration, H2S oxidation, and SO42- reduction in aerobic trickling-filter biofilms was studied by measuring concentration profiles at high spatial resolution (25 to 100 μm) with microsensors for O2, S2-, and pH. Specific reaction rates were calculated from measured concentration profiles by using a simple one-dimensional diffusion reaction model. The importance of electron acceptor and electron donor availability for the microzonation of respiratory processes and their reaction rates was investigated. Oxygen respiration was found in the upper 0.2 to 0.4 mm of the biofilm, whereas sulfate reduction occurred in deeper, anoxic parts of the biofilm. Sulfate reduction accounted for up to 50% of the total mineralization of organic carbon in the biofilms. All H2S produced from sulfate reduction was reoxidized by O2 in a narrow reaction zone, and no H2S escaped to the overlying water. Turnover times of H2S and O2 in the reaction zone were only a few seconds owing to rapid bacterial H2S oxidation. Anaerobic H2S oxidation with NO3- could be induced by addition of nitrate to the medium. Total sulfate reduction rates increased when the availability of SO42- or organic substrate increased as a result of deepening of the sulfate reduction zone or an increase in the sulfate reduction intensity, respectively.  相似文献   

11.
A dissimilatory Fe(III)- and Mn(IV)-reducing microorganism was isolated from freshwater sediments of the Potomac River, Maryland. The isolate, designated GS-15, grew in defined anaerobic medium with acetate as the sole electron donor and Fe(III), Mn(IV), or nitrate as the sole electron acceptor. GS-15 oxidized acetate to carbon dioxide with the concomitant reduction of amorphic Fe(III) oxide to magnetite (Fe3O4). When Fe(III) citrate replaced amorphic Fe(III) oxide as the electron acceptor, GS-15 grew faster and reduced all of the added Fe(III) to Fe(II). GS-15 reduced a natural amorphic Fe(III) oxide but did not significantly reduce highly crystalline Fe(III) forms. Fe(III) was reduced optimally at pH 6.7 to 7 and at 30 to 35°C. Ethanol, butyrate, and propionate could also serve as electron donors for Fe(III) reduction. A variety of other organic compounds and hydrogen could not. MnO2 was completely reduced to Mn(II), which precipitated as rhodochrosite (MnCO3). Nitrate was reduced to ammonia. Oxygen could not serve as an electron acceptor, and it inhibited growth with the other electron acceptors. This is the first demonstration that microorganisms can completely oxidize organic compounds with Fe(III) or Mn(IV) as the sole electron acceptor and that oxidation of organic matter coupled to dissimilatory Fe(III) or Mn(IV) reduction can yield energy for microbial growth. GS-15 provides a model for how enzymatically catalyzed reactions can be quantitatively significant mechanisms for the reduction of iron and manganese in anaerobic environments.  相似文献   

12.
Bacterial Utilization of Dodecyl Sulfate and Dodecyl Benzene Sulfonate   总被引:14,自引:12,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Two unknown bacterial isolants (C12 and C12B) were obtained from enriched soils and cultured on media containing detergent compounds as sole sources of carbon. Either isolant destroyed the foaming capacity of cultures containing dodecyl sulfate; but C12B, which could grow on dodecyl benzene sulfonate (DBS) whereas C12 could not, did not destroy the foaming capacity of this surfactant. The source of DBS available in quantity was a mixture of isomers derived from kerosene, and the bacteria utilized only one-fifth to one-fourth of this material during growth. Both isolants grew on short- or long-chained organic acids, and resting cells of both rapidly oxidized several long-chain acids and alcohols. Three of five phenyl-placement isomers of DBS (with the phenyl group at carbon 2, 3, or 6 on the alkyl chains) were excellent substrates for growth of C12B, but isomers with phenyl placement at carbon 4 or 5 were toxic and killed the bacteria.  相似文献   

13.
Pimenov  N. V.  Ivanova  A. E. 《Microbiology》2005,74(3):362-370
A detailed study of the processes of anaerobic methane oxidation and sulfate reduction in the bacterial mats occurring on coral-like carbonate structures in the region of methane seeps in the Black Sea, as well as of the phenotypic diversity of sulfate-reducing bacteria developing in this zone, has been performed. The use of the radioisotopic method shows the microbial mat structure to be heterogeneous. The peak activity of the two processes was revealed when a mixture of the upper (dark) and underlying (intensely pink) layers was introduced into an incubation flask, which confirms the suggestion that methanotrophic archaea and sulfate-reducing bacteria closely interact in the process of anaerobic methane oxidation. Direct correlation between the rate of anaerobic methane oxidation and the methane and electron acceptor concentrations in the medium has been experimentally demonstrated. Several enrichment and two pure cultures of sulfate-reducing bacteria have been obtained from the near-bottom water and bacterial mats. Both strains were found to completely oxidize the substrates to CO2 and H2S. The bacteria grow at temperatures ranging from −1 to 18 (24)°C, with an optimum in the 10–18°C range, and require the presence of 1.5–2.5% NaCl and 0.07–0.2% MgCl 2⋅6H2O. Regarding the aggregate of their phenotypic characteristics (cell morphology, spectrum of growth substrates, the capacity for complete oxidation), the microorganisms isolated have no analogues among the psychrophilic sulfate-reducing bacteria already described. The results obtained demonstrate the wide distribution of psychrophilic sulfate-reducing bacteria in the near-bottom water and bacterial mats covering the coral-like carbonate structures occurring in the region of methane seeps in the Black Sea, as well as the considerable catabolic potential of this physiological group of psychrophilic anaerobes in deep-sea habitats__________Translated from Mikrobiologiya, Vol. 74, No. 3, 2005, pp. 420–429.Original Russian Text Copyright © 2005 by Pimenov, Ivanova.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Microorganisms play a significant role in the speciation and mobility of arsenic in the environment. In this study, the oxidation of arsenite [As(III)] to arsenate [As(V)] linked to chlorate (ClO3) reduction was shown to be catalyzed by sludge samples, enrichment cultures (ECs), and pure cultures incubated under anaerobic conditions. No activity was observed in treatments lacking inoculum or with heat-killed sludge, or in controls lacking ClO3. The As(III) oxidation was linked to the complete reduction of ClO3 to Cl, and the molar ratio of As(V) formed to ClO3 consumed approached the theoretical value of 3:1 assuming the e equivalents from As(III) were used to completely reduce ClO3. In keeping with O2 as a putative intermediate of ClO3 reduction, the ECs could also oxidize As(III) to As(V) with O2 at low concentrations. Low levels of organic carbon were essential in heterotrophic ECs but not in autotrophic ECs. 16S rRNA gene clone libraries indicated that the ECs were dominated by clones of Rhodocyclaceae (including Dechloromonas, Azospira, and Azonexus phylotypes) and Stenotrophomonas under autotrophic conditions. Additional phylotypes (Alicycliphilus, Agrobacterium, and Pseudoxanthomonas) were identified in heterotrophic ECs. Two isolated autotrophic pure cultures, Dechloromonas sp. strain ECC1-pb1 and Azospira sp. strain ECC1-pb2, were able to grow by linking the oxidation of As(III) to As(V) with the reduction of ClO3. The presence of the arsenite oxidase subunit A (aroA) gene was demonstrated with PCR in the ECs and pure cultures. This study demonstrates that ClO3 is an alternative electron acceptor to support the microbial oxidation of As(III).The contamination of drinking water with arsenic (As) is a global public health issue. Arsenic is a human carcinogenic compound (2), which poses a risk to millions of people around the world (31). The most common oxidation states of As in aqueous environments are arsenite [As(III), H3AsO3] or arsenate [As(V), H2AsO4, and HAsO42−]. Microbial processes play critical roles in controlling the fate and transformation of As in subsurface systems (22). As(V) binds to aluminum oxides more extensively than As(III) under circumneutral pH conditions (12, 16). Both As(III) and As(V) are strongly adsorbed on iron oxides (9). However, As(III) is more rapidly desorbed compared to As(V) (35).Aerobic bacteria can oxidize As(III) forming As(V) (14, 28), which potentially is less mobile in the subsurface environment. Also, in environments with dissolved ferrous iron [Fe(II)] the oxidation of Fe(II) (both abiotic and biotic) would result in formation of Fe(III) (hydr)oxides such as ferrihydrite which adsorb As. Oxidation processes, therefore, can decrease the mobilization of As in groundwater. However, oxygen (O2) is poorly soluble in groundwater and may become consumed by microbial activity, creating anaerobic zones. Alternative oxidants aside from O2 also have the potential to support the microbial oxidation of As(III). Recently, several studies have demonstrated that nitrate-dependent As(III) oxidation is carried out by anaerobic microorganisms to gain energy from As(III) oxidation. As(III)-oxidizing denitrifying bacteria have been isolated from various environments including As-contaminated lakes and soil (21, 25), as well as enrichment cultures (ECs), and isolates from pristine sediments and sludge samples (33, 34). 16S rRNA gene clone library characterization of the ECs indicates that the predominant phylotypes were from the genus Azoarcus and the family Comamonadaceae (34).Beside nitrate, chlorate (ClO3) can also be considered as a possible alternative oxidant for microorganisms to promote the bioremediation of contaminated plumes (6, 17). (Per)chlorate is commonly used as a terminal electron acceptor by anaerobic bacteria; as a result, it is completely degraded to the benign end product, chloride (Cl). Microbial reduction of perchlorate proceeds via a three-step process of ClO4 → ClO3→ ClO2 → O2 + Cl (6). Reduction of perchlorate to chlorate, and chlorate to chlorite is catalyzed by respiratory (per)chlorate reductases (3). Subsequent disproportionation of chlorite into Cl and O2 is catalyzed by chlorite dismutase, which is the fastest step, and the O2 produced is immediately consumed for energy of cell synthesis (6). Although organic compounds are the most well studied electron donors for (per)chlorate reduction, Fe(II) oxidation has also been shown to be linked to microbial ClO3 reduction (36).The main objective of the present study is to explore the potential use of ClO3 as an electron acceptor for the microbial oxidation of As(III) by anaerobic bacteria. The theoretical stoichiometry of the reaction is presented below: (1) Based on bioenergetic considerations, the reaction is feasible as indicated by the highly exergonic standard change in Gibbs free energy [ΔG0′ = −92.4 kJ mol−1 As(III)] calculated from E0′ values of 0.618 and 0.139 V for ClO3/Cl (6) and As(V)/As(III) (18), respectively.  相似文献   

16.
Anaerobic activation of benzene is expected to represent a novel biochemistry of environmental significance. Therefore, benzene metabolism was investigated in Geobacter metallireducens, the only genetically tractable organism known to anaerobically degrade benzene. Trace amounts (<0.5 μM) of phenol accumulated in cultures of Geobacter metallireducens anaerobically oxidizing benzene to carbon dioxide with the reduction of Fe(III). Phenol was not detected in cell-free controls or in Fe(II)- and benzene-containing cultures of Geobacter sulfurreducens, a Geobacter species that cannot metabolize benzene. The phenol produced in G. metallireducens cultures was labeled with 18O during growth in H218O, as expected for anaerobic conversion of benzene to phenol. Analysis of whole-genome gene expression patterns indicated that genes for phenol metabolism were upregulated during growth on benzene but that genes for benzoate or toluene metabolism were not, further suggesting that phenol was an intermediate in benzene metabolism. Deletion of the genes for PpsA or PpcB, subunits of two enzymes specifically required for the metabolism of phenol, removed the capacity for benzene metabolism. These results demonstrate that benzene hydroxylation to phenol is an alternative to carboxylation for anaerobic benzene activation and suggest that this may be an important metabolic route for benzene removal in petroleum-contaminated groundwaters, in which Geobacter species are considered to play an important role in anaerobic benzene degradation.  相似文献   

17.
Growth and iron oxidation by Thiobacillus ferrooxidans are affected by the presence of silver, molybdenum, uranium and copper. Growth is more sensitive to the presence of these metals than the iron oxidation system of the bacterium. Silver toxicity is much more specific than molybdenum and uranium. Iron oxidation is inhibited at only 0.1 parts/106 of silver which is 300 and 5000 times less than the minimum inhibitory concentration of molybdenum and uranium, respectively. Copper and zinc at concentrations as high as 2000 and 15 000 parts/106, respectively, have no influence on the iron oxidation rate. In the presence of silver, molybdenum, uranium and copper below their minimum inhibitory concentrations as well as in the absence of nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium, iron oxidation is not coupled to growth.  相似文献   

18.
Rates of sulfate reduction (SR) and anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) in hydrothermal deep-sea sediments from Guaymas Basin were measured at temperatures of 5 to 200°C and pressures of 1 × 105, 2.2 × 107, and 4.5 × 107 Pa. A maximum SR of several micromoles per cubic centimeter per day was found at between 60 and 95°C and 2.2 × 107 and 4.5 × 107 Pa. Maximal AOM was observed at 35 to 90°C but generally accounted for less than 5% of SR.  相似文献   

19.
In the high-rate anaerobic reactors studied (ca. 10 g of chemical oxygen demand [COD] removed per liter of reactor per day), the sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) were poor competitors of methane-producing bacteria (MPB), scavenging only on the order of 10 to 20% of the total electron flow. The relatively noncompetitive nature of the SRB in this type of reactor is in sharp contrast to the tendency of the SRB to dominate in natural environments and in other types of anaerobic digesters. Various factors such as the feedback inhibition of H2S on the SRB, iron limitation, the origin of the SRB inocula, biokinetics, and thermodynamics were investigated. The outcome of the SRB-MPB competition under the reactor conditions studied appeared to be particularly determined by two factors. The SRB, as predicted by the Vmax-Km kinetics, competed most effectively at low substrate levels (<0.5 g of COD per liter). The MPB, however, appeared to colonize and adhere much more effectively to the polyurethane carrier matrix present in the reactor, thus compensating for the apparent lower growth rates. Even if the reactor was initially allowed to be predominantly colonized by SRB, the MPB could regain dominance.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of different substrates and different levels of sulfate and sulfide on methane production relative to sulfate reduction in high-rate anaerobic digestion was evaluated. Reactors could be acclimated so that sulfate up to a concentration of 5 g of sulfate S per liter did not significantly affect methanogenesis. Higher levels gave inhibition because of salt toxicity. Sulfate reduction was optimal at a relatively low level of sulfate, i.e., 0.5 g of sulfate S per liter, but was also not significantly affected by higher levels. Both acetoclastic and hydrogenotrophic methane-producing bacteria adapted to much higher levels of free H2S than the values reported in the literature (50% inhibition occurred only at free H2S levels of more than 1,000 mg/liter). High levels of free H2S affected the sulfate-reducing bacteria only slightly. Formate and acetate supported the sulfate-reducing bacteria very poorly. In the high-rate reactors studied, intensive H2S formation occurred only when H2 gas or an H2 precursor such as ethanol was supplied.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号