Effect of Lipid Type on the Acidogenic Performance of Food Waste

Author:

Liu Chao1,Li Sheng1,Niu Hongyu1,Yang Haijun1,Tan Ju2,Zhang Jiachao1,Ren Liheng1,Yan Binghua1

Affiliation:

1. College of Environment & Ecology, Hunan Agricultural University, Changsha 410128, China

2. Changsha Environmental Monitoring Center Station, Changsha 410001, China

Abstract

Due to its high lipid content and intricate constitution, food waste poses a considerable challenge for biotreatment. This research aims to investigate the potential influence of diverse lipid species on anaerobic fermentation, induced by the varying dietary patterns observed in distinct regions. The investigation involved incorporating 5% (w/w) of beef tallow, mutton fat, soybean oil, peanut oil, and rapeseed oil, separately, into simulated food waste, and subjected it to batch mode acidogenic fermentation. The inclusion of unsaturated fatty acids resulted in a redirection of the metabolic pathway from the lactic acid type to the ethanol, acetic acid, and butyric acid types. The succession of the acidogenic metabolic pathway was highly correlated with the lipid types; beef tallow, mutton fat, soybean oil, and peanut oil delayed the metabolic process by 1, 2, 3, and 8 d, respectively, whereas rapeseed oil accelerated it by 2 d. The lipids contained within the food waste did not facilitate the buildup of soluble substances, resulting in a decrease of 14.0~59.7%. Notwithstanding, valeric acid was exclusively generated during the beef tallow and peanut oil treatments, whereas the production of lactic acid in peanut oil showed a 35.9% increase in comparison to the control.

Funder

Hunan Provincial Natural Science Foundation

Hunan Provincial Key R&D

Project of Hunan Science and Technology Innovation Team

Hunan Youth Science and Technology Innovation Talent Project

Changsha Science & Technology Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),Food Science

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