Microbial lipid production from food waste saccharified liquid and the effects of compositions

The residues of food waste after removing waste cooking oils could be converted to microbial lipid by oleaginous yeasts and microbial lipid could be used as a raw material of biodiesel with waste cooking oils. This process would have positive environmental and economic benefits. However, the composi...

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Main Authors: Ma, Xiaoyu, Gao, Zhen, Gao, Ming, Ma, Yingqun, Ma, Hongzhi, Zhang, Min, Liu, Yu, Wang, Qunhui
Other Authors: Advanced Environmental Biotechnology Centre
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142261
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1422612020-06-18T03:04:09Z Microbial lipid production from food waste saccharified liquid and the effects of compositions Ma, Xiaoyu Gao, Zhen Gao, Ming Ma, Yingqun Ma, Hongzhi Zhang, Min Liu, Yu Wang, Qunhui Advanced Environmental Biotechnology Centre Nanyang Environment and Water Research Institute Engineering::Chemical engineering Food Waste Saccharified Liquid Rhodosporidium Toruloides The residues of food waste after removing waste cooking oils could be converted to microbial lipid by oleaginous yeasts and microbial lipid could be used as a raw material of biodiesel with waste cooking oils. This process would have positive environmental and economic benefits. However, the composition of food waste is extremely complex. Many types of organic acids, such as lactic acid and acetic acid, could be accumulated during the collection, transportation and storage processes. The effects of these substances on microbial lipid production remained unknown. In this study, food waste saccharified liquid (FWSL) without any additional nutrients was fed to Rhodosporidium toruloides 2.1389 for microbial lipid production. Total biomass concentration, lipid concentration and lipid yield increased by 87.4%, 69.4% and 69.3%, respectively, compared with the YPD medium. Remarkably, increasing the concentration of lactic acid in the medium promoted the total biomass concentration of yeast. Furthermore, lipid concentration decreased slightly when single lactic acid or single acetic acid concentration was below 5 g/L or 1 g/L in the culture media. Metal elements that were present in the medium had considerable synergistic effects on lipid production. When four metal elements (i.e. Mg, Ca, Na and K) were present in the medium, total biomass concentration, lipid concentration, lipid content and lipid yield increased by 22.01%, 33.51%, 9.43% and 33.33%, respectively, compared with those in the control group. The interaction among the FWSL compositions that led to the promotion of microbial lipid production was beyond the inhibition effect. The engineering implication analysis evidently suggested that the process of microbial lipid production from FWSL was economically feasible and had potential industrial application prospects. 2020-06-18T03:04:08Z 2020-06-18T03:04:08Z 2018 Journal Article Ma, X., Gao, Z., Gao, M., Ma, Y., Ma, H., Zhang, M., . . . Wang, Q. (2018). Microbial lipid production from food waste saccharified liquid and the effects of compositions. Energy Conversion and Management, 172, 306-315. doi:10.1016/j.enconman.2018.07.005 0196-8904 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142261 10.1016/j.enconman.2018.07.005 2-s2.0-85049778213 172 306 315 en Energy Conversion and Management © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Chemical engineering
Food Waste Saccharified Liquid
Rhodosporidium Toruloides
spellingShingle Engineering::Chemical engineering
Food Waste Saccharified Liquid
Rhodosporidium Toruloides
Ma, Xiaoyu
Gao, Zhen
Gao, Ming
Ma, Yingqun
Ma, Hongzhi
Zhang, Min
Liu, Yu
Wang, Qunhui
Microbial lipid production from food waste saccharified liquid and the effects of compositions
description The residues of food waste after removing waste cooking oils could be converted to microbial lipid by oleaginous yeasts and microbial lipid could be used as a raw material of biodiesel with waste cooking oils. This process would have positive environmental and economic benefits. However, the composition of food waste is extremely complex. Many types of organic acids, such as lactic acid and acetic acid, could be accumulated during the collection, transportation and storage processes. The effects of these substances on microbial lipid production remained unknown. In this study, food waste saccharified liquid (FWSL) without any additional nutrients was fed to Rhodosporidium toruloides 2.1389 for microbial lipid production. Total biomass concentration, lipid concentration and lipid yield increased by 87.4%, 69.4% and 69.3%, respectively, compared with the YPD medium. Remarkably, increasing the concentration of lactic acid in the medium promoted the total biomass concentration of yeast. Furthermore, lipid concentration decreased slightly when single lactic acid or single acetic acid concentration was below 5 g/L or 1 g/L in the culture media. Metal elements that were present in the medium had considerable synergistic effects on lipid production. When four metal elements (i.e. Mg, Ca, Na and K) were present in the medium, total biomass concentration, lipid concentration, lipid content and lipid yield increased by 22.01%, 33.51%, 9.43% and 33.33%, respectively, compared with those in the control group. The interaction among the FWSL compositions that led to the promotion of microbial lipid production was beyond the inhibition effect. The engineering implication analysis evidently suggested that the process of microbial lipid production from FWSL was economically feasible and had potential industrial application prospects.
author2 Advanced Environmental Biotechnology Centre
author_facet Advanced Environmental Biotechnology Centre
Ma, Xiaoyu
Gao, Zhen
Gao, Ming
Ma, Yingqun
Ma, Hongzhi
Zhang, Min
Liu, Yu
Wang, Qunhui
format Article
author Ma, Xiaoyu
Gao, Zhen
Gao, Ming
Ma, Yingqun
Ma, Hongzhi
Zhang, Min
Liu, Yu
Wang, Qunhui
author_sort Ma, Xiaoyu
title Microbial lipid production from food waste saccharified liquid and the effects of compositions
title_short Microbial lipid production from food waste saccharified liquid and the effects of compositions
title_full Microbial lipid production from food waste saccharified liquid and the effects of compositions
title_fullStr Microbial lipid production from food waste saccharified liquid and the effects of compositions
title_full_unstemmed Microbial lipid production from food waste saccharified liquid and the effects of compositions
title_sort microbial lipid production from food waste saccharified liquid and the effects of compositions
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142261
_version_ 1681059707717943296