Bio-Energy Generation from Synthetic Winery Wastewaters

In Spain, the winery industry exerts a great influence on the national economy. Proportional to the scale of production, a significant volume of waste is generated, estimated at 2 million tons per year. In this work, a laboratory-scale reactor was used to study the feasibility of the energetic valor...

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Main Authors: Stanislaw Marks, Jacek Dach, Jose Luis Garcia-Morales, Francisco Jesus Fernandez-Morales
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/23/8360
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spelling doaj-c715519bae774e46a86ed24804e7dd712020-11-27T08:01:18ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172020-11-01108360836010.3390/app10238360Bio-Energy Generation from Synthetic Winery WastewatersStanislaw Marks0Jacek Dach1Jose Luis Garcia-Morales2Francisco Jesus Fernandez-Morales3Institute of Biosystems Engineering, Poznań University of Life Sciences, ul. Wojska Polskiego 50, 60-637 Poznań, PolandInstitute of Biosystems Engineering, Poznań University of Life Sciences, ul. Wojska Polskiego 50, 60-637 Poznań, PolandEnvironmental Technologies Department, Institute of Viticulture and Agri-Food Research (IVAGRO), Faculty of Environmental and Marine Sciences, International Campus of Excellence (ceiA3), University of Cadiz, Puerto Real, 11510 Cádiz, SpainChemical Engineering Department, Faculty of Chemical Sciences & Technologies, University of Castilla-La Mancha, Avenida Camilo José Cela, 12, 13071 Ciudad Real, SpainIn Spain, the winery industry exerts a great influence on the national economy. Proportional to the scale of production, a significant volume of waste is generated, estimated at 2 million tons per year. In this work, a laboratory-scale reactor was used to study the feasibility of the energetic valorization of winery effluents into hydrogen by means of dark fermentation and its subsequent conversion into electrical energy using fuel cells. First, winery wastewater was characterized, identifying and determining the concentration of the main organic substrates contained within it. To achieve this, a synthetic winery effluent was prepared according to the composition of the winery wastewater studied. This effluent was fermented anaerobically at 26 °C and pH = 5.0 to produce hydrogen. The acidogenic fermentation generated a gas effluent composed of CO<sub>2</sub> and H<sub>2</sub>, with the percentage of hydrogen being about 55% and the hydrogen yield being about 1.5 L of hydrogen at standard conditions per liter of wastewater fermented. A gas effluent with the same composition was fed into a fuel cell and the electrical current generated was monitored, obtaining a power generation of 1 W·h L<sup>−1</sup> of winery wastewater. These results indicate that it is feasible to transform winery wastewater into electricity by means of acidogenic fermentation and the subsequent oxidation of the bio-hydrogen generated in a fuel cell.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/23/8360winery wastewatersacidogenic fermentationbio-hydrogen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stanislaw Marks
Jacek Dach
Jose Luis Garcia-Morales
Francisco Jesus Fernandez-Morales
spellingShingle Stanislaw Marks
Jacek Dach
Jose Luis Garcia-Morales
Francisco Jesus Fernandez-Morales
Bio-Energy Generation from Synthetic Winery Wastewaters
Applied Sciences
winery wastewaters
acidogenic fermentation
bio-hydrogen
author_facet Stanislaw Marks
Jacek Dach
Jose Luis Garcia-Morales
Francisco Jesus Fernandez-Morales
author_sort Stanislaw Marks
title Bio-Energy Generation from Synthetic Winery Wastewaters
title_short Bio-Energy Generation from Synthetic Winery Wastewaters
title_full Bio-Energy Generation from Synthetic Winery Wastewaters
title_fullStr Bio-Energy Generation from Synthetic Winery Wastewaters
title_full_unstemmed Bio-Energy Generation from Synthetic Winery Wastewaters
title_sort bio-energy generation from synthetic winery wastewaters
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2020-11-01
description In Spain, the winery industry exerts a great influence on the national economy. Proportional to the scale of production, a significant volume of waste is generated, estimated at 2 million tons per year. In this work, a laboratory-scale reactor was used to study the feasibility of the energetic valorization of winery effluents into hydrogen by means of dark fermentation and its subsequent conversion into electrical energy using fuel cells. First, winery wastewater was characterized, identifying and determining the concentration of the main organic substrates contained within it. To achieve this, a synthetic winery effluent was prepared according to the composition of the winery wastewater studied. This effluent was fermented anaerobically at 26 °C and pH = 5.0 to produce hydrogen. The acidogenic fermentation generated a gas effluent composed of CO<sub>2</sub> and H<sub>2</sub>, with the percentage of hydrogen being about 55% and the hydrogen yield being about 1.5 L of hydrogen at standard conditions per liter of wastewater fermented. A gas effluent with the same composition was fed into a fuel cell and the electrical current generated was monitored, obtaining a power generation of 1 W·h L<sup>−1</sup> of winery wastewater. These results indicate that it is feasible to transform winery wastewater into electricity by means of acidogenic fermentation and the subsequent oxidation of the bio-hydrogen generated in a fuel cell.
topic winery wastewaters
acidogenic fermentation
bio-hydrogen
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/23/8360
work_keys_str_mv AT stanislawmarks bioenergygenerationfromsyntheticwinerywastewaters
AT jacekdach bioenergygenerationfromsyntheticwinerywastewaters
AT joseluisgarciamorales bioenergygenerationfromsyntheticwinerywastewaters
AT franciscojesusfernandezmorales bioenergygenerationfromsyntheticwinerywastewaters
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