Published January 1, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Reactor Designs and Configurations for Biological and Bioelectrochemical C1 Gas Conversion: A Review

  • 1. Dokuz Eylul Univ, Dept Environm Engn, TR-35390 Izmir, Turkey
  • 2. Univ Minho, Ctr Biol Engn CEB, P-4710057 Braga, Portugal
  • 3. Izmir Democracy Univ, Dept Environm Protect Technol, TR-35140 Izmir, Turkey

Description

Microbial C1 gas conversion technologies have developed into a potentially promising technology for converting waste gases (CO2, CO) into chemicals, fuels, and other materials. However, the mass transfer constraint of these poorly soluble substrates to microorganisms is an important challenge to maximize the efficiencies of the processes. These technologies have attracted significant scientific interest in recent years, and many reactor designs have been explored. Syngas fermentation and hydrogenotrophic methanation use molecular hydrogen as an electron donor. Furthermore, the sequestration of CO2 and the generation of valuable chemicals through the application of a biocathode in bioelectrochemical cells have been evaluated for their great potential to contribute to sustainability. Through a process termed microbial chain elongation, the product portfolio from C1 gas conversion may be expanded further by carefully driving microorganisms to perform acetogenesis, solventogenesis, and reverse beta-oxidation. The purpose of this review is to provide an overview of the various kinds of bioreactors that are employed in these microbial C1 conversion processes.

Files

bib-648c95f6-05ce-49c7-b698-205beccfcfea.txt

Files (243 Bytes)

Name Size Download all
md5:de0a95a9b003b39f731f8418b60772a4
243 Bytes Preview Download