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Biotransformation of water lettuce (Pistia stratiotes) to biohydrogen by Rhodopseudomonas palustris.

AIMS: Aim of the paper was to assess the feasibility of producing hydrogen as a biofuel by photofermentation of fermented water lettuce (Pistia stratiotes L.) waste biomass, after a nitrogen-stripping treatment.

METHODS AND RESULTS: A natural (42OL) and an engineered strain (CGA676, with low-ammonium sensitivity) of Rhodopseudomonas palustris were used for producing hydrogen. The stripping procedure was highly effective for ammonium removal, with an acceptable selectivity (91% of ammonium was removed; only 14% of total organic acids were lost). Both strains were able to produce hydrogen only in the nitrogen-stripped substrate. The natural strain R. palustris 42OL showed a higher Biochemical Hydrogen Potential (1224 ml l-1 vs 720 ml l-1 ; 50·0 mol m-3 vs 29·4 mol m-3 ), but at a lower rate (5·6 ml l-1  h-1 vs 7·3 ml l-1  h-1 ; 0·23 mol m-3  h-1 vs 0·29 mol m-3  h-1 ) than strain CGA676.

CONCLUSIONS: Water lettuce waste biomass can be used for biofuel production, after hydrolization, fermentation and nitrogen stripping.

SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The investigation on novel, low cost and sustainable biomasses as feedstocks for biofuel production is a priority. Aquatic plants do not compete for arable land. Moreover, water lettuce is a floating and invasive weed, thus its biomass must be harvested when detrimental, and can now be biotransformed in clean hydrogen.

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