TY - JOUR
T1 - Principles, Advances, and Perspectives of Anaerobic Digestion of Lipids
AU - Holohan, B. Conall
AU - Duarte, M. Salomé
AU - Szabo-Corbacho, M. Alejandra
AU - Cavaleiro, Ana J.
AU - Salvador, Andreia F.
AU - Pereira, M. Alcina
AU - Ziels, Ryan M.
AU - Frijters, Carla T.M.J.
AU - Pacheco-Ruiz, Santiago
AU - Carballa, Marta
AU - Sousa, Diana Z.
AU - Stams, Alfons J.M.
AU - O'Flaherty, Vincent
AU - Van Lier, Jules B.
AU - Alves, M. Madalena
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/4/19
Y1 - 2022/4/19
N2 - Several problems associated with the presence of lipids in wastewater treatment plants are usually overcome by removing them ahead of the biological treatment. However, because of their high energy content, waste lipids are interesting yet challenging pollutants in anaerobic wastewater treatment and codigestion processes. The maximal amount of waste lipids that can be sustainably accommodated, and effectively converted to methane in anaerobic reactors, is limited by several problems including adsorption, sludge flotation, washout, and inhibition. These difficulties can be circumvented by appropriate feeding, mixing, and solids separation strategies, provided by suitable reactor technology and operation. In recent years, membrane bioreactors and flotation-based bioreactors have been developed to treat lipid-rich wastewater. In parallel, the increasing knowledge on the diversity of complex microbial communities in anaerobic sludge, and on interspecies microbial interactions, contributed to extend the knowledge and to understand more precisely the limits and constraints influencing the anaerobic biodegradation of lipids in anaerobic reactors. This critical review discusses the most important principles underpinning the degradation process and recent key discoveries and outlines the current knowledge coupling fundamental and applied aspects. A critical assessment of knowledge gaps in the field is also presented by integrating sectorial perspectives of academic researchers and of prominent developers of anaerobic technology.
AB - Several problems associated with the presence of lipids in wastewater treatment plants are usually overcome by removing them ahead of the biological treatment. However, because of their high energy content, waste lipids are interesting yet challenging pollutants in anaerobic wastewater treatment and codigestion processes. The maximal amount of waste lipids that can be sustainably accommodated, and effectively converted to methane in anaerobic reactors, is limited by several problems including adsorption, sludge flotation, washout, and inhibition. These difficulties can be circumvented by appropriate feeding, mixing, and solids separation strategies, provided by suitable reactor technology and operation. In recent years, membrane bioreactors and flotation-based bioreactors have been developed to treat lipid-rich wastewater. In parallel, the increasing knowledge on the diversity of complex microbial communities in anaerobic sludge, and on interspecies microbial interactions, contributed to extend the knowledge and to understand more precisely the limits and constraints influencing the anaerobic biodegradation of lipids in anaerobic reactors. This critical review discusses the most important principles underpinning the degradation process and recent key discoveries and outlines the current knowledge coupling fundamental and applied aspects. A critical assessment of knowledge gaps in the field is also presented by integrating sectorial perspectives of academic researchers and of prominent developers of anaerobic technology.
KW - bioreactor configuration
KW - codigestion
KW - FOG
KW - LCFA
KW - microbiology
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85127899465
U2 - 10.1021/acs.est.1c08722
DO - 10.1021/acs.est.1c08722
M3 - Review article
C2 - 35357187
AN - SCOPUS:85127899465
SN - 0013-936X
VL - 56
SP - 4749
EP - 4775
JO - Environmental Science and Technology
JF - Environmental Science and Technology
IS - 8
ER -