Conversion of wine lees and waste activated sludge into caproate and heptanoate: Thermodynamic and microbiological insights
Résumé
In this study, wine lees and waste activated sludge (WAS) were co-fermented for the first time in a 4:1 ratio (COD basis) at 20, 40, 70 and 100 gCOD/L, in batch at 37 °C and pH 7.0. The substrates were successfully converted to caproate (C6) and heptanoate (C7) with a high selectivity (40.2 % at 40 gCOD/L). The rapidly-growing chain-elongating microbiome was enriched in Clostridiaceae and Oscillospiraceae, representing together 3.4–8.8 % of the community. Substrate concentrations higher than 40 gCOD/L negatively affected C6 and C7 selectivities and yields, probably due to microbial inhibition by high ethanol concentrations (15.82–22.93 g/L). At 70 and 100 gCOD/L, chain elongation shifted from ethanol-based to lactate-based, with a microbiome enriched in the lactic acid bacteria Roseburia intestinalis (27.3 %) and Enterococcus hirae (13.8 %). The partial pressure of H2 (pH2) was identified by thermodynamic analysis as a fundamental parameter for controlling ethanol oxidation and improving C6 and C7 selectivities.