Evaluation of toxic effect of monoterpene compounds on anaerobic digestion
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Trujillo Reyes, Ángeles; Pérez, Ana G.; Cuéllar, Sofía G.; Serrano Moral, Antonio; Cubero Cardoso, Juan; Jeison, David; Fermoso, Fernando G.Editorial
Elsevier
Materia
Antimicrobial properties Biodegradation Inhibition
Fecha
2024-01-24Referencia bibliográfica
Trujillo-Reyes, Ángeles, et al. Evaluation of toxic effect of monoterpene compounds on anaerobic digestion. Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 12 (2024) 112035 [10.1016/j.jece.2024.112035]
Patrocinador
Pablo de Olavide University and the Santander Bank for mobility grant; Next Generation European Funds and the Ministry of Universities of Spain for funding the Recualificaci´on del Profesorado Universitario system; Economic Transformation, Industry, Knowledge, and Universities Department of the Andalucia Autonomous Government for Emergia fellowship (EMERGIA20_00114); CRHIAM centre (ANID/FONDAP/15130015); Funding for open access charge: Universidad de Granada / CBUA.Resumen
Monoterpenes are antimicrobial compounds widely distributed in vegetable biomass, whose inhibitory potential for anaerobic digestion is underestimated. In this research, the toxic effect of limonene and fenchone, two of the main monoterpenes present in vegetable biomasses, and those of 4-terpineol, α-terpineol, and p-cymene, compounds described as main metabolites of limonene degradation, have been assessed. Methane production was totally inhibited at dosed of 1000 mg L-1 of fenchone and limonene and at 600 mg L-1 of p-cymene and 4-terpineol. Based on the methane production rate, the inhibition followed the next trend: α-terpineol < < fenchone < limonene ≈ p-cymene < 4-terpineol. Regardless of dosed concentration, monoterpenes were mostly degraded at the end of the experiment (>85%), except p-cymene at 600 mg L-1. Therefore, monoterpenes could entail a high risk of inhibition that can be aggravated by the difficulty to accurately follow their concentration and by the scarce information on their effect on anaerobic process.