The Effect of Temperature on Lignin Degradation in Municipal Solid Waste

Paper and paperboard are the major constituents found in US landfills. Typically paper consists of 79% to 98% of lignocellulose which is considered to be the most abundant source of natural carbon on earth. Lignocellulose decomposition depends on the association of biodegradable cellulose and hemice...

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Main Author: Miroshnikova, Olga
Other Authors: Environmental Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/44891
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09212006-195109/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-448912020-09-29T05:39:22Z The Effect of Temperature on Lignin Degradation in Municipal Solid Waste Miroshnikova, Olga Environmental Engineering Novak, John T. Randall, Clifford W. Goldsmith, C. Douglas Jr. lignin paper anaerobic biosolids lignin monomers elevated temperature Paper and paperboard are the major constituents found in US landfills. Typically paper consists of 79% to 98% of lignocellulose which is considered to be the most abundant source of natural carbon on earth. Lignocellulose decomposition depends on the association of biodegradable cellulose and hemicellulose with lignin. Lignin is a recalcitrant material which hinders cellulose degradation in conventional landfills. Because of this property of lignin cellulose to lignin ratio (C/L) is a common landfill stabilization parameter. Refuse degradation in landfills is a microbiological process and is highly dependent on temperature, moisture, and pH. Bioreactor landfills are designed to enhance biodegradation of refuse by providing favorable conditions for microorganisms. Effect of elevated temperature and moisture on possibility of lignin degradation is studied in this work. Synthetic and newspaper lignin were preheated and then inoculated with anaerobically digested sludge. Newspaper in distilled water exposed to 95°C for 48 hours released 8 times more of solubilized lignin then non preheated newspaper. Moreover lignin monomers were detected as a result of 95°C pretreatment indicating the positive effect of high temperature on the providing lignin in more bioavailable form for microbes. Digested sludge inocula was found to be capable of lignin monomers degradation as well as low but significant mineralization of synthetic lignin with approximately 6% of carbon originated from lignin mineralized into methane and carbon dioxide. An exponentially increasing trend for lignin monomers solubilization as a function of temperature was observed for three types of substrate, synthetic lignin, cardboard, and newspaper with the highest rate of solubilization for newspaper. Results of this study suggest that some lignin degradation can occur at conditions typical for bioreactor landfills. Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:46:25Z 2014-03-14T21:46:25Z 2006-09-07 2006-09-21 2008-11-20 2006-11-20 Thesis etd-09212006-195109 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/44891 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09212006-195109/ MSOlgaMiroshnikova.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic lignin
paper
anaerobic biosolids
lignin monomers
elevated temperature
spellingShingle lignin
paper
anaerobic biosolids
lignin monomers
elevated temperature
Miroshnikova, Olga
The Effect of Temperature on Lignin Degradation in Municipal Solid Waste
description Paper and paperboard are the major constituents found in US landfills. Typically paper consists of 79% to 98% of lignocellulose which is considered to be the most abundant source of natural carbon on earth. Lignocellulose decomposition depends on the association of biodegradable cellulose and hemicellulose with lignin. Lignin is a recalcitrant material which hinders cellulose degradation in conventional landfills. Because of this property of lignin cellulose to lignin ratio (C/L) is a common landfill stabilization parameter. Refuse degradation in landfills is a microbiological process and is highly dependent on temperature, moisture, and pH. Bioreactor landfills are designed to enhance biodegradation of refuse by providing favorable conditions for microorganisms. Effect of elevated temperature and moisture on possibility of lignin degradation is studied in this work. Synthetic and newspaper lignin were preheated and then inoculated with anaerobically digested sludge. Newspaper in distilled water exposed to 95°C for 48 hours released 8 times more of solubilized lignin then non preheated newspaper. Moreover lignin monomers were detected as a result of 95°C pretreatment indicating the positive effect of high temperature on the providing lignin in more bioavailable form for microbes. Digested sludge inocula was found to be capable of lignin monomers degradation as well as low but significant mineralization of synthetic lignin with approximately 6% of carbon originated from lignin mineralized into methane and carbon dioxide. An exponentially increasing trend for lignin monomers solubilization as a function of temperature was observed for three types of substrate, synthetic lignin, cardboard, and newspaper with the highest rate of solubilization for newspaper. Results of this study suggest that some lignin degradation can occur at conditions typical for bioreactor landfills. === Master of Science
author2 Environmental Engineering
author_facet Environmental Engineering
Miroshnikova, Olga
author Miroshnikova, Olga
author_sort Miroshnikova, Olga
title The Effect of Temperature on Lignin Degradation in Municipal Solid Waste
title_short The Effect of Temperature on Lignin Degradation in Municipal Solid Waste
title_full The Effect of Temperature on Lignin Degradation in Municipal Solid Waste
title_fullStr The Effect of Temperature on Lignin Degradation in Municipal Solid Waste
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Temperature on Lignin Degradation in Municipal Solid Waste
title_sort effect of temperature on lignin degradation in municipal solid waste
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/44891
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09212006-195109/
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