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Enhancement of methanol production from synthetic gas mixture by Methylosinus sporium through covalent immobilization

Authors
Patel, Sanjay K. S.Selvaraj, ChandraboseMardina, PrimataJeong, Jae-HoonKalia, Vipin C.Kang, Yun ChanLee, Jung-Kul
Issue Date
1-6월-2016
Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Keywords
Greenhouse gases; Immobilization; Methane; Methanol production; Methylosinus sporium; Synthetic gas mixture
Citation
APPLIED ENERGY, v.171, pp.383 - 391
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
APPLIED ENERGY
Volume
171
Start Page
383
End Page
391
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/88377
DOI
10.1016/j.apenergy.2016.03.022
ISSN
0306-2619
Abstract
Both methane (CH4) and carbon dioxide (CO2) are major greenhouse gases (GHGs); hence, effective processes are required for their conversion into useful products. CH4 is used by a few groups of methanotrophs to produce methanol. However, to achieve economical and sustainable CH4 reduction strategies, additional strains are needed that can exploit natural CH4 feed stocks. In this study, we evaluated methanol production by Methylosinus sporium from CH4 and synthetic gas. The optimum pH, temperature, incubation period, substrate, reaction volume to headspace ratio, and phosphate buffer concentration were determined to be 6.8, 30 C, 24 h, 50% CH4, 1:5, and 100 mM (with 20 mM MgC12 [a methanol dehydrogenase inhibitor]), respectively. Optimization of the production conditions and process parameters significantly improved methanol production from 0.86 mM to 5.80 mM. Covalent immobilization of M. sporium on Chitosan significantly improved the stability and reusability for up to 6 cycles of reuse under batch culture conditions. The immobilized cells utilized a synthetic gas mixture containing CH4, CO2, and hydrogen (at a ratio of 6:3:1) more efficiently than free cells, with a maximum methanol production of 6.12 mM. This is the first report of high methanol production by M. sporium covalently immobilized on a solid support from a synthetic gas mixture. Utilization of cost-effective feedstocks derived from natural resources will be an economical and environmentally friendly way to reduce the harmful effects of GHGs. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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