Effects of chemical pretreatments on material solubilization of Areca catechu L. husk: Digestion, biodegradability, and kinetic studies for biogas yield

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2022

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Academic Press

Abstract

This study aimed to understand the pretreatment-aided anaerobic digestion of lignocellulosic residues and to assess the substrate solubilization capacity of pretreatment processes. We evaluated the feasibility of biogas production using chemically pretreated Areca catechu L. (Arecanut husk, AH). AH was pretreated for 24h at two different temperatures—25 °C and 90 °C with four different chemicals viz. H<inf>2</inf>SO<inf>4</inf> (acidic), NaOH (alkaline), H<inf>2</inf>O<inf>2</inf> (oxidative), and ethanol in 1% H<inf>2</inf>SO<inf>4</inf> (organosolv) under each temperature. AH solubilization assessment included analyses of parameters such as volatile solids to total solids (VS:TS) ratio, soluble chemical oxygen demand, total phenolic content, and biomass composition. Alkaline pretreatment of AH at 90 °C resulted in the maximum biogas yield of 683.89mL/gVS, which was 2.3 times more than that obtained using raw AH without pretreatment. Methane content of biogas produced using AH pretreated with 2–10% of NaOH was found to be between 71.53% and 75.06%; methane content of biogas using raw AH was 62.31%. In order to describe the AH degradation patterns, biogas production potential from pretreated AH was evaluated using bacterial kinetic growth models (First-order exponential, logistic, transference, and modified Gompertz models). The modified Gompertz and logistic models (correlation coefficient >0.99) were found to have the best fit of all kinetic models for the cumulative experimental biogas curve. We formulated a multiple linear regression equation depicting the biodegradability index (BI) as a technical tool to determine biomethane production; BI is represented as a function of biomass composition (cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin), with a high correlation (>0.95). Based on our analyses of AH pretreatment and substrate utilization for biogas production, we propose that the biochemical composition of lignocellulosic residues should be carefully considered to ensure their biodegradability when subjected to anaerobic digestion. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd

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Keywords

Alkalinity, Biodegradability, Biogas, Biomass, Cellulose, Chemical oxygen demand, Kinetic theory, Kinetics, Linear regression, Methane, Sodium hydroxide, Substrates, Alkaline pretreatment, Areca catechu L, Arecanut, Arecanut husk, Biogas production, Biomass compositions, Lignocellulosic biomass, Regression equation, Solubilisation, Anaerobic digestion, alcohol, biogas, hydrogen peroxide, lignocellulose, methane, phenol derivative, sodium hydroxide, sulfuric acid, volatile fatty acid, biofuel, lignin, alkalinity, anaerobic digestion, biochemical composition, biodegradation, biomass, cellulose, crop residue, solubilization, anaerobic sludge, Areca catechu, Article, bacterial growth, biodegradability, cell wall, chemical oxygen demand, controlled study, degradation kinetics, delignification, feasibility study, first order rate constant, kinetics, microbial degradation, nonhuman, pH, scanning electron microscopy, temperature, anaerobic growth, Areca, digestion, metabolism, Anaerobiosis, Biofuels, Digestion, Hydrogen Peroxide, Lignin, Sodium Hydroxide

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Journal of Environmental Management, 2022, 316, , pp. -

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