ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Energy Res., 10 January 2019

Sec. Bioenergy and Biofuels

Volume 6 - 2018 | https://doi.org/10.3389/fenrg.2018.00143

Effect of Pretreatment and Substrate Ratios in Biorefinery Employing Co-digestion of Plant Biomass and Poultry Waste

  • 1. Department of Environmental Sciences, COMSATS University Islamabad, Abbottabad Campus, Abbottabad, Pakistan

  • 2. Department of Chemical Engineering, COMSATS University Islamabad, Lahore Campus, Lahore, Pakistan

  • 3. Military College of Engineering (MCE), National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST), Risalpur Campus, Risalpur, Pakistan

Abstract

The current study investigated the optimization of biogas generation during co-digestion of various plant biomasses with poultry waste at different ratios and pretreatment of plant biomass. The biochemical tests were executed at 35°C in a thermostat. Water hyacinth was found as the suitable substrate for mono and co-digestion due to high volatile solids (VS) and total soluble contents. However, poultry waste was appropriate only if it was co-digested with other biomasses. The experiments evaluating biogas generation at different ratios of plant biomasses and poultry waste demonstrated that water hyacinth and poultry (50:50) produced 262 mL g−1VS, giant reed and poultry (80:20) produced 235 mL g−1VSwhile maize and poultry (60:40) generated 193 mL g−1VS. However, the pretreating the plant biomass with either Fenton's or Fenton's plus ultrasonic had no effect on biogas generation. The volumes of biogas generated after various pretreatment were low as compared to condition without pretreatment. The codigestion can be classified as WH:P (50:50 > GR:P (80:20) > M:P (60:40). So, these ratios can be applied at decentralized scale for better waste management and biogas generation due to balanced C:N ratio of plant biomass and poultry manure. Co-digestion can also be applied at large scale with optimized ratio in Pakistan and other developing countries for biogas generation and waste management and reduce the methane emission through landfills.

Introduction

Currently, the world is facing problems like environmental contamination and shortage of energy. Exploring non-conventional and eco-friendly sources of energy is serious consideration of many developing nations (Owamah et al., 2014). In this scenario, the need and exploration of alternative biofuels is a need of the hour. Even exploitation of methanogenesis during anaerobic digestion (AD) is quite old (Triolo et al., 2011). The advantages of AD are multi-dimensional; it not only reduces wastes from the environment but also helps in nutrient turn over along generation of biomethane as an important energy source. The industrial viability of AD demands an appropriate low-cost amalgamation of physicochemical parameters for the optimum functioning of this process (Owamah et al., 2014). For a sustainable and productive AD process, appropriate amounts of various macro and micronutrients including N, P, S, Fe, Ni, Se, W, Co, Mo, among many others is quite desirable (Chen et al., 2008; Demirel and Scherer, 2008; Hinken et al., 2008). The role of co-digestion, pretreatment and digester design for the enhancement of biogas have been thoroughly reviewed by Shah et al. (2015).

Co-digestion involves the use of two different substrates in a mixture at different ratios. Previously, it was iterated that methanogenesis could significantly be enhanced and optimized if feedstocks were co-digested with animal wastes (Cavinato et al., 2010). In view of few drawbacks of feed stocks for mono-digestion (Hinken et al., 2008; Pobeheim et al., 2010), the codigestion of various substrates always resulted in enhanced biogas generation. Considering the nature, strength flow rate of the substrate used and the biogas generation could be enhanced in range of 25–400% (Callaghan et al., 2002; Alatrwaste-Mondragón et al., 2006).

Researchers reported different results for the screening of diverse biomasses for methanogenesis in mono-digestion and co-digestion. An increase of 400% was noted in methanogenesis when pig manure was co-digested with glycerol under mesophilic conditions (Astals et al., 2012). Co-digestion of algal biomass and fats, oils, and waste grease resulted in increased biogas production with gradual rise in organic loadings (Park et al., 2012). Stable biogas generation of 621 L/kgVS was observed at HRT of 42 days by digesting 50% slurry and whey mixture (Comino et al., 2012). The combination of waste paper, cow dung, and Eichhornia crassipes was evaluated for methanogenesis and the results were promising to reduce waste paper and enhancing biogas yield (Comino et al., 2012). In addition to increased methanogenesis, co-digestion of various substrates may present many advantages like high OLR, better biodegradability, balance of nutrients, suitable C:N ratio and lowering of toxicity of some substrates (Khalid et al., 2011; Wang et al., 2012, 2013). The preference of co-digestion was also advocated by (De Varies, 2012). AD of sewage sludge with poultry manure was also found beneficial (Bujoczek et al., 2000).

Biogas production was also found plentiful when substrates containing lignocelluloses was digested anaerobically (Zheng et al., 2014). In case of substrates containing high lignocellulose contents, pretreatment of biomasses with various techniques can be useful (Zheng et al., 2014) which reduce lignin, crystallinity but increase surface area. However, the richness of lignocellulose contents in the feedstock of AD may pose a barrier to microbial action on these substrates thus limiting the performance of AD (Fernández-Cegrí et al., 2012). In view of promising results obtained for co-digestion of different substrates, the importance of poultry waste in providing phosphorus for AD has never been realized to treat water hyacinth and other substrates. Water hyacinth is an abundant biomass that grows prolifically in all tropical and sub-tropical regions of the world. We anticipated that better biogas yield might be resulted by co-digestion of plant biomasses with poultry waste along with pretreatments. Pretreatment may be useful in view of fibrous nature of substrates which might have high cellulose and lingo-cellulosic materials. Based on above published reports, the aim of the current research was to evaluate the effects of pretreatment and co-digestion of various plant wastes with poultry litter for biogas generation.

Methodology

Sampling

Various substrates were collected for the experimentation from various non-contaminated places of Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa province of Pakistan. Prior to feeding into bioreactor, the plant biomasses and poultry wastes were air and oven dried at 35°C. The plant biomasses were chopped and ground for further experimentation.

Experimental Design

All the experiments were carried out in triplicates in a flask of volume of 500 ml for 30 days. The active volume was 100 ml with headspace of 400 ml for ratio experiment. The reactors were operated at temperature of 35°C as given in the Figure 1. Inoculum to substrate ratio (I/S) of 2:1 was administered to the bioreactor. The contents of the bioreactors were purged with nitrogen gas for 5 min to generate anaerobic conditions for microbes and subsequently sealed using butyl rubber stoppers. An outlet in the stopper was used for collecting biogas in inverted graduated cylinder and biogas was measured daily by water displacement as previously described by Shah et al. (2015). The pH of liquid in the inverted cylinder was kept acidic using 0.01 M HCl to avoid carbon dioxide absorption from biogas. A blank reactor was also run containing inoculum and distilled water, incubated at the same temperature to measure the background biogas produced from the inoculum and for pretreatment, which was subtracted from the total biogas production. All the digesters were monitored daily for biogas production. Experimental design for biomass ratio was given in the Table 1 and pretreatment design was shown in the Table 2.

Figure 1

Table 1

Different Biomass ratioPoultry (g)Giant Reed (g)Maize (g)Water hyacinth (g)Inoculum (mL)Water (mL)
50:5055552010
80:2082222010
20:8028882010
60:4064442010
40:6046662010

Experimental design for different biomass ratio test.

Table 2

Plant biomassWeight (g)Pretreatment conditions
Frequency (Khz)Power (W)Time (minutes)Temperature (°C)
Giant Reed10402.71030
Maize10402.71030
Water Hyacinth10402.71030

Experimental design for pretreatment of plant biomass for biogas production.

Biogas Unit

A schematic diagram of experimental set up was adapted from Shah et al. (2015). It consisted of a temperature controlled water bath at 35°C containing digesters for the experiment. Each digester was connected to a graduated gas collector by means of a connecting tube. The experimental set up was shown in Figure 1. Biogas evolved was collected by downward water displacement as described above.

Seed Inoculum

Anaerobic sludge was used from the already running experiment. Therefore, it was assumed as microbiologically adequate to treat various substrates proposed for the BMP assays. Similarly, the amount of inoculum used in the test bottles was determined based on amount of organic substrate available for degradation, i.e., inoculum-to-substrate (I/S) ratio (on VS basis), which was equivalent to the inverse value of the food-to-microorganisms (F/I) ratio.

Statistical Analysis

All determinations were performed in triplicates and mean values were presented in the results. Statistical comparisons of the mean values were performed by two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) using Sigma PlotTM v.12.

Results and Discussion

Effect of Different Biomass Ratios

A batch experiment was carried out to test co-digestion of different biomasses such as giant reed (GR), water hyacinth (WH), maize (M), and poultry (P) along with monodigestion. Poultry and plant biomass had no naturally occurring microbes and therefore, needed ample inoculation for startup of AD. The biomasses were co-digested at various ratios (50:50. 80:20, 60:40, 40:60, and 20:80) to test its potential for biogas generation. The biomasses were also characterized chemically to evaluate biogas generation through anaerobic mono and co-digestion. In case of mono-digestion, water hyacinth was the leading substrate among all the four selected substrates. The specific biogas production was the highest for WH (234 mL g−1VS) followed by GR (107 mL g−1VS), M (92 mL g−1VS), and P (49 mL g−1VS) for mono-digestion. The chemical composition distinctly showed that WH had high volatile solids and soluble contents make the basis for highest cumulative biogas yield and daily biogas production as shown in Figures 2, 3.

Figure 2

Figure 3

Various ratios of water hyacinth and poultry (WH: P) were presented in Figure 4. The 50:50 ratios of WH and P showed the highest biogas yield than rest of ratios of the same biomasses. The maximum biomethane yields from E. crassipes were 8.54 kJ g−1 dry biomass and 853.9 GJ ha−1y−1 which were 2.9 times higher than other crops (Yeong-Song et al., 2011). The total CO2 emission reduced the bioenergy production of E. crassipes and replacing coal, fossil oil and natural gas with E. crassipes would reduce the CO2 emission of 15.2–23.7 ton per year (Yeong-Song et al., 2011). Water hyacinth can be rich in nitrogen, up to 3.2% of DM and have a C:N ratio around 15. Water hyacinth was recommended as a substrate for compost or biogas production (Gunnarsson and Petersen, 2007).

Figure 4

On volatile solids (VS) basis, different ratios of water hyacinth and poultry 50:50, 80:20, 20:80, 60:40, and 40:60 produced specific biogas values of 262, 170, 164, 148, and 116 mL g−1 VS, respectively. The ratio of 50:50 produced the highest biogas production which might be due to the better C:N ratio ranging between 15 and 30 which seemed to be suitable range for microbial growth (Haug, 1993). Lower amounts of biogas produced at other ratios might be due to imbalanced C:N ratio. As it shown in the Table 1, water hyacinth contained 21.34 ppm nitrogen and poultry contained 16 ppm nitrogen. So, the excessive N in other different ratio affected the C:N ratio thereby affected the biogas production. At very high C:N ratio, accumulation of VFAs occurs which leads to inhibition of anaerobic digestion. For all tested ratios of water hyacinth and poultry substrate, the biogas generation at 50:50 ratio was significantly different from other ratios during 30 days of experiment.

The daily biogas production of water hyacinth and poultry at different ratios were shown in the Figure 5. A ratio of 50:50 had the most stable biogas production and was significantly different from rest of tested ratios until day 15. The 20:80 ratio of WH: P had less biogas production up to 10th day in comparison to other ratios. On VS basis, 40% of water hyacinth with poultry waste had better contribution for biogas generation. Almost similar contribution on VS basis (35%) of was shown by raw sludge and food waste which enhanced the anaerobic digestion process as compared to mono-digestion (Koch et al., 2015). The co-digestion of APW with DM increased the biogas and methane yield by 11.7–28.6 and 18.9–43.7%, respectively, compared with the mono-digestion of APW. However, the ratio of 3:1 for Aloe peel waste and dairy manure (APW/DM) depicted the optimal performance leading to the highest cumulative methane yield (195.1 mL g−1 VS) (Huang et al., 2016). Figure 6 showed the results of cumulative biogas production for different ratios for giant reed and poultry. For all the 80:20 and 20:80 mixing ratios of Giant reed (GR), and Poultry (P), better results were recorded as compared with all other ratios. The biogas production for 80:20 and 20:80 were 235 and 229 mL g−1VS compared to monodigestion of GR 107 mL g−1 VS. The 50:50 ratios of GR and P had least biogas production as compared to all other ratios. The pH of the 50:50 was 5.5. Lower pH might be due to the aggregation of VFAs. The C/N ratio may be a major factor behind such results; the impact of the C/N ratio on AD has been investigated at the optimum C/N ratio of 20–25 (Mshandete et al., 2004; Yen and Brune, 2007). With the higher C:N ratio, VFAs may accumulate. If C:N was lower than the appropriate range, methanogens may be inhibited by the high ammonia concentration (Gong et al., 2011; Banks et al., 2012).

Figure 5

Figure 6

The daily rate of biogas production for various ratios of giant reed and poultry substrates were presented in Figure 7. In the beginning of the experiment 60:40 ratio of the GR and P had the highest biogas production peak. The most stable biogas production rates were given by 60:40 from day 13 to day 23. By comparing the monodigestion of GR the overall daily biogas production was <40 mL d−1. The co-digestion of giant reed and poultry resulted in improved daily biogas production.

Figure 7

The biogas production at various ratios of maize and poultry substrate was presented in the Figure 8. For all the ratios of M and P, the 40:60 has the highest cumulative biogas production. However, 80:20 had the lowest biogas production by comparing with all other ratio. On basis of VS, 40:60 produced 193 mL g−1 VS, 20:80 gave 172 mL g−1 VS, 60:40 gives 153 mL g−1 VS, 50:50 generated 136 mL g−1VS, and 80:20 produced 121 mL g−1 VS. The order of biogas production on VS basis was 40:60> 20:80> 60:40>50:50 and 80:20. The primary reason may be for production of less biogas production from mixing ratio of Maize and Poultry of 50:50 and 80:20 seemed high VFAs volatile fatty acids and reduced pH, which might have caused process instability.

Figure 8

The stability of anaerobic digestion was often expressed as the ratio of VFA to alkalinity. A ratio of <0.4 was generally regarded as optimal for anaerobic digestion, whereas a ratio exceeding 0.6 was regarded as indicative of overfeeding (Brown and Li, 2013). The results showed that acidogenesis was dominant over acetogenesis.

The production of long chain fatty acids causes slight inhibition of biogas production. However, a study evaluated the dairy manure and switch grass which presented best results at 50:50 ratio (Zheng et al., 2015). The positive effects of co-digestion can be accredited to manifold factors, including proportional nutrient composition, accelerated synergistic effects of microbial composition, an associated increase in buffering capacity and a decreased effect of toxic compounds on the digestion process (Wang et al., 2012). Figure 9 presents the daily biogas production rate for different ratios of Maize and poultry waste (M:P). Initially, the 80:20 ratio had the highest biogas production. However, during the latter stages of the experiment 40:60 and 20:80 had the highest and stable biogas production than 80:20 and 60:40 ratios. The biogas production was decreasing with the passage of due to substrate utilization during the 30 day, experiment. During last 10 days, biogas production was minimal as compared to early days of the experiment. The comparison of present study with the previous ones was presented in Table 3.

Figure 9

Table 3

Co-substratesExperimental Conditions
RTTRS (substrate ratio) yieldpHMethane/biogas
Poultry (P) and Hog Wastes (H)1335(P:H) 100:0, 80:20,60:40, 40:60, 20:80, 0:100Initial P = 6 Initial H = 5 Remaining = 7–7.5Biogas yield H80 = 200 mL g−1 VS CH4 = 130 mL g−1 VSMagbanua et al., 2001
CM with Cattle slurry (CS)2135CS:CM 100:0, 70:30,50:50, 25:75, 10:907.8-8CH4 = 0.12 m3kg−1 VSCallaghan et al., 2002
Diluted Chicken manure+ Whey1835Whey in CM = 15%, 25%, 35%, 50% v/vManure:7.4 Whey:3.5Biogas production:1.5 to 2.5 Ld−1Gelegenwas et al., 2007
CM or dairy or Swine manure with Switch grass6255CM:Switch grass 0.95:26.9CH4 2mL g−1 VSAhn et al., 2010
CM:DM and Wheat Straw (WS)3035DM:CM 100:0, 0:100, 50:50 and WS added to the DM:CM mixture to adjust C/N ratio to 1/257.03-7.34234.7 mL g−1 VSWang et al., 2012
CM with Spartina alternefloria residues35CM:SAR 1:4,4:1, 2:3,3:2,0:5,5:0 based on TSBiogas 107.25 mL g-1 TS 76.92 % CH4Chen et al., 2012
CM and Corn Stover (CS)3037CS:CM 1:0,3:1,1:1, 1:3, 0:1 (based on VS)7.9Methane yield = 205 mL g−1 VSLi et al., 2013
CM, Cattle manure and Maize silage3735CM:Cattle manure: Maize silage (1:1:1) based on VS7.4- 8.3CH4 693 mL g−1 VSYangin-Gomec and Ozturk, 2013
Water hyacinth and Poultry (W: P)3035Biogas (mL g−1VS)Current study
60:406.5148
40:606116
80:206170
20:806.5164
50:507262
Giant Reed and Poultry (GR:P)3035Biogas (mL g−1VS)Current study
60:406.5148
40:606125
80:207235
20:807229
50:506117
Maize and Poultry (M:P)3035Biogas (mL g−1VS)Current study
60:406.5193
40:606153
80:206121
20:806.5172
50:506136

The comparison of current study with those previous researches.

Effect of Various Pretreatments

The effect of Fenton and Fenton plus ultrasonication pretreatment on biogas generation of WH was shown in the Figure 10. The biogas produced by WH biomass treated with Fenton's and Fenton's plus ultrasonic was lesser than control. The reason for less biogas production in the present study from the chemical pretreatment might be due to the less target of ligno-cellulosic part of the WH. However, in literature the thermal pretreatment of the water hyacinth was quite effective for biogas optimization (Barua and Kalamdhad, 2017). The biochemical study unveiled that the cumulative methane production of hot air oven pretreated WH (3039 ± 32 mL CH4 g−1 VS) at 90°C for 1 h was way higher than the cumulative methane production of untreated substrate 2396 ± 19 mL CH4 g−1 VS on the 35th day (Barua and Kalamdhad, 2017). The cumulative biogas production from day second to day 8th the WH pretreated with Fenton's and Fenton's plus ultrasonic were not significantly different (p > 0.05). The Figure 11 presents the pretreatment effect of Fenton's and Fenton's plus ultrasonic on daily biogas production. From the beginning, there was no significant effect of both pretreatment on biogas production with the control. However, Fenton pretreatment was comparatively better than Fenton's and Fenton's plus ultrasonic pretreatment. The less biogas production may due to the low energy application of ultrasound where no cell lysis occurred and COD solubilisation was due to exo-polymer dissolution, resulting in low methane production. However, at higher energies the disruption of the cell contributed to enhanced methane production (González-Fernández et al., 2012). The ultrasound pretreatment was recommended and effective when the lignocellulosic material to mix with water (Rodriguez et al., 2017). For daily biogas production, the control and both pretreatments were significantly different (p < 0.05) on day first; however, control and both pretreatments were significantly not different (p > 0.05) on day sixth. From day seventh to day 27th control and both pretreatments were significantly different (p < 0.05).

Figure 10

Figure 11

The cumulative biogas production from Maize with pretreatments such as Fenton's and Fenton's plus ultrasonic was shown in the Figure 12. On VS basis, the cumulative biogas production from maize under the mentioned pretreatments was 61 mL g−1VS and 30 mL g−1VS. Both the pretreatments were effective for biogas production up to 15 days. By comparing with control the Fenton pretreatment was more efficient than Fenton's plus ultrasonic. The cumulative biogas production for maize pretreatment with Fenton's and Fenton's plus ultrasonic with control were not significantly different (p > 0.05). However, from day 20th to day 30th control vs. pretreatments were significantly different (p < 0.05). The current ultrasonic pretreatment was carried out at 30°C. Temperature has crucial influence in the samples used for sonication because other studies showed that it has a great influence on the changing of different properties of the liquid medium, such as viscosity, surface tension, and mainly vapor pressure, which influence cavitation (Karray et al., 2015). As the temperature of the liquid increases, its vapor pressure, and consequently the vapor pressure inside the bubble, also increases when implosion occurs. It can be seen that the ultrasonication pre-treatment results in the solubilization of carbohydrates. However, the current results for biogas production at 30°C were not fruitful as compared to the other results conducted experiments with macro algal biomass (Karray et al., 2015). In the most recent article published by Rodriguez et al. (2017) it was recommended that plant biomass must be mixed with water for optimum results.

Figure 12

The daily biogas production of Maize after pretreatment with Fenton's and Fenton's plus ultrasonic was represented in the Figure 13. In the beginning, biogas production from the pretreated biomass was lesser. However, on the 5th day onwards, biogas production from pretreated biomass was higher than biomass pretreated with Fenton's and from control. The daily biogas production was stable on 15th day onwards until 30th day. Figure 14 depicts the cumulative biogas production of giant reed with Fenton's and Fenton's plus ultrasonics pretreatment. The giant reed pretreated with Fenton's was comparatively better for biogas production than the giant reed pretreated with Fenton's plus ultrasonic. However, both pretreatments giant reed produced lower biogas than the control. Lower biogas production might be due to chemical effect of pretreatment on the microbial guilds of the batch system. The cumulative biogas production from day 1st to day 12th both pretreatment and control were not significantly different (p > 0.05).

Figure 13

Figure 14

The daily biogas production for the pretreated giant reed with Fenton's and Fenton's plus ultrasonic were shown in the Figure 15. In the early stages, daily biogas production for Fenton plus ultrasonic was lesser than control and giant reed biomass pretreated with Fenton. After day 3, biogas production from both pretreatment was almost at same level until day 19th. After 20th day the daily biogas production for both pretreatment were different. The daily biogas production from day 1st, day 3rd, were significantly different (p < 0.05).

Figure 15

The above-mentioned findings are quite practical in enhancing biogas production from various biomasses rich in cellulosic or lignocellulosic contents. There were two objectives of this investigation viz. the balancing of nutrients by the codigestion process and secondly the overcoming of toughness of lingo-cellulosic materials through physic-chemical pretreatment. The results produced are very promising and quite practical in the sense that we recommend co-digestion of WH, giant reed, and poultry waste in order to enhance biogas yield per gram VS basis. Water hyacinth and poultry codigestion was the most promising in enhancing biogas production. Poultry waste could be a rich source of phosphorus which could satisfy the nutrient deficiency and to optimize C:N:P for an optimum methanogenesis. The codigestion can be classified as WH:P (50:50) > GR:P (80:20) > M:P (60:40). So, these ratios can be applied at decentralized scale for better waste management and biogas generation due to balanced C:N ratio of plant biomass and poultry manure. Co-digestion can also be applied at large scale with optimized ratio in Pakistan and other developing countries for biogas generation and waste management and reduce the methane emission through landfills. Co-digestion can be applied at home scale by operating through pickle barrel digester to play a key role against the global warming to avoid the open dumping of waste. The present study does not recommend the use of pretreatment as discussed above. The use of various chemicals especially Fenton reagent may disturb pH and chemical composition of feedstock and thus disturb optimum conditions for AD. The chemical structure of the feedstock may also be affected which resulted in lower biogas yields.

Conclusion

The batch experiments were conducted with various ratios and pretreatment of water hyacinth, giant reed, maize, and poultry substrates. The incubated biomasses were optimized at different ratios. The ratios experiments involving various selected plant biomasses and poultry wastes concluded that water hyacinth and poultry (50:50) produced 262 mL g−1VS, Giant reed and Poultry produced (80:20) produced 235 mL g−1VS, while Maize and Poultry (60:40) produced 193 mL g−1VS. So, these ratios can be applied at decentralized scale for better waste management and biogas generation due to balanced C:N ratio of plant biomass and poultry manure. However, the Fenton and Fenton's plus ultrasonic pretreatments of plant biomasses were not suitable for biogas optimization as compared to co-digestion.

Statements

Author contributions

All authors listed have made a substantial, direct and intellectual contribution to the work, and approved it for publication.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

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Summary

Keywords

anaerobic digestion, co-digestion, giant reed, maize, pretreatment, water hyacinth

Citation

Shah FA, Rashid N, Mahmood Q and Ali A (2019) Effect of Pretreatment and Substrate Ratios in Biorefinery Employing Co-digestion of Plant Biomass and Poultry Waste. Front. Energy Res. 6:143. doi: 10.3389/fenrg.2018.00143

Received

06 August 2018

Accepted

10 December 2018

Published

10 January 2019

Volume

6 - 2018

Edited by

Abdul-Sattar Nizami, King Abdulaziz University, Saudi Arabia

Reviewed by

Md Mofijur Rahman, Central Queensland University, Australia; Mohammad Rehan, King Abdulaziz University, Saudi Arabia

Updates

Copyright

*Correspondence: Qaisar Mahmood

This article was submitted to Bioenergy and Biofuels, a section of the journal Frontiers in Energy Research

Disclaimer

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

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