Recovery of purple non-sulfur bacteria-mediated single-cell protein from domestic wastewater in two-stage treatment using high rate digester and raceway pond

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Abstract

Wastewater resources can be used to produce microbial protein for animal feed or organic fertiliser, conserving food chain resources. This investigation has employed the fermented sewage to photoheterotrophically grown purple non-sulfur bacteria (PNSB) in a 2.5 m3 pilot-scale raceway-pond with infrared light to produce proteinaceous biomass. Fermented sewage with synthetic media consisting of sodium acetate and propionic acids at a surface-to-volume (S/V) ratio of 10 m2/m3 removed 89%, 93%, and 81% of chemical oxygen demand, ammonium nitrogen, and orthophosphate, respectively; whereas respective removal in fermented sewage alone without synthetic media was 73%, 73%, and 72% during batch operation of 120 h. The biomass yield of 0.88–0.95 g CODbiomass /g CODremoved with protein content of 40.3 ± 0.3%–43.9 ± 0.2% w/w was obtained for fermented sewage with synthetic media. The results revealed enhanced possibility of scaling-up the raceway reactor to recover resources from municipal wastewater and enable simultaneous high-rate PNSB single-cell protein production.

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File under embargo until 12-03-2025