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ACS Omega ; 6(47): 31935-31944, 2021 Nov 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34870016

RESUMO

Biogenic coalbed methane (CBM) is generally believed to be formed by anaerobic bacteria and methanogens, while a few studies took fungi into account. Here, the microflora consisting of fungi and methanogens was enriched from the produced water associated with the Qinshui Basin using anthracite as the only carbon source. The maximum methane yield of 231 µmol/g coal was obtained after 22 days of cultivation under the optimum temperature of 35 °C, pH of 8, salinity of 0-2%, particle size of 0.075-0.150 mm, and the solid-liquid ratio of 1:30. It could remain active even after exposure to air for 24 h. Miseq results showed that the archaea were mainly composed of Methanocella, a hydrogenotrophic methanogen, followed by acetoclastic methanogen Methanosaeta and Methanosarcina, which could use various methanogenic substrates. The fungal communities mainly included Amorphotheca, Alternaria, Aspergillus, and Penicilium, which are all able to degrade complex organics such as aromatics and lignin. After cultivation, the crystal structure of anthracite became looser, as shown by XRD results, which might be due to the swelling effect caused by the destruction of the aromatic ring structure of coal under the function of fungi. The stretching vibration intensity of each functional group in coal decreased with cultivation, as revealed by FTIR. The GC-MS results showed that the concentration of alkanes and alcohols decreased significantly, which are the products of ring-opening of aromatics by fungi. These results suggested that fungi and methanogens in the coalbed also can syntrophically degrade coal effectively, especially for aromatics in coal.

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