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Methane production and active microbial communities during anaerobic digestion of three commercial biodegradable coffee capsules under mesophilic and thermophilic conditions

The Science of The Total Environment 2021 75 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
G. Cazaudehore, G. Cazaudehore, G. Cazaudehore, G. Cazaudehore, R. Guyoneaud, R. Guyoneaud, Florian Monlau Claire Gassie, Audrey Lallement, Audrey Lallement, R. Guyoneaud, R. Guyoneaud, Florian Monlau

Summary

Researchers compared mesophilic and thermophilic anaerobic digestion of three commercial biodegradable coffee capsules, finding that thermophilic conditions (58°C) achieved full degradation around 100 days and roughly doubled methane yields, with the genus Tepidimicrobium identified as a likely key microorganism in thermophilic plastic biodegradation.

Biodegradable plastics market is increasing these last decades, including for coffee capsules. Anaerobic digestion, as a potential end-of-life scenario for plastic waste, has to be investigated. For this purpose, mesophilic (38 °C) and thermophilic (58 °C) anaerobic digestion tests on three coffee capsules made up with biodegradable plastic (Beanarella®, Launay® or Tintoretto®) and spent coffee (control) were compared by their methane production and the microbial communities active during the process. Mesophilic biodegradation of the capsules was slow and did not reach completion after 100 days, methane production ranged between 67 and 127 NL (CH) kg (VS). Thermophilic anaerobic digestion resulted in a better biodegradation and reached completion around 100 days, methane productions were between 257 and 294 NL (CH) kg (VS). The microbial populations from the reactors fed with plastics versus spent coffee grounds were significantly different, under both the mesophilic and the thermophilic conditions. However, the different biodegradable plastics only had a small impact on the main microbial community composition at a similar operational temperature and sampling time. Interestingly, the genus Tepidimicrobium was identified as a potential key microorganisms involved in the thermophilic conversion of biodegradable plastic in methane.

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