Enhancement of biogenic methane production by co-degradation of coal and
straw: microbial and organic analysis
Abstract
Co-degradation of coal and straw could produce significantly higher
methane which was potential to increase biogenic CBM. In this study, the
success of microflora and organic compounds during co-degradation was
determined by MiSeq and GC-MS, and compared with cultivations with only
coal (C) and with only straw (RS). The results showed that the methane
production in co-degradation was 12 times higher than that in
cultivation C. A shift of dominant methanogen was caused by the addition
of straw from acetoclastic Methanosaeta in inoculum to methylotrophic
Methanomethylovorans in 7 days, then hydrogenotrophic Methanobacterium.
The bacteria and fungi with ability to degrade macromolecules in coal
and metabolize VFAs were enriched which would facilitate methanogenesis.
VFAs, especially butanoic acid, were dominant in intermediates of
co-degradation which contributed to methane production as their content
were negatively corelated with methane production. The different
component of intermediates and microbial communities among
co-degradation, cultivations C and RS suggested that the metabolic
pathway in co-degradation was distinctive and the fracture of coal
molecules was almost completed in the first 7 days of cultivation. Coal
might also serve as the suitable microhabitat for microorganisms to
avoid the threat from environment in addition to function as
methanogenic substrates.