Article | REF: BIO3352 V1

Hydrogen biproduction by photosynthetic microorganisms

Authors: Laurent COURNAC, Jérémy PRUVOST, Jack LEGRAND

Publication date: May 10, 2012

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ABSTRACT

Mechanisms leading to hydrogen production by photosynthetic microorganisms are described in this article, as well as the biological potential of optimisation. The different protocols leading to the production of hydrogen are reviewed. Two steps are generally used for microalgae-based processes, an oxygenic step of biomass growth and an anoxic step of hydrogen production. However, this mode of biohydrogen production has not yet been fully developed and only laboratory techniques are presented. Different types of photobioreactors were used in order to implement both stages of the production protocol.

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AUTHORS

  • Laurent COURNAC: Researcher, CEA Cadarache, DSV, IBEB, UMR 6191 CNRS/CEA/Aix-Marseille Université (Saint-Paul-lez-Durance)

  • Jérémy PRUVOST: Professor at the University of Nantes, GEPEA – UMR 6144 CNRS/Université de Nantes/École des mines de Nantes/ONIRIS, CRTT (Saint-Nazaire)

  • Jack LEGRAND: Professor at the University of Nantes, GEPEA – UMR 6144 CNRS/Université de Nantes/École des mines de Nantes/ONIRIS, CRTT (Saint-Nazaire)

 INTRODUCTION

Many micro-organisms have the ability to produce hydrogen. For several species of fermentative bacteria, hydrogen production enables energy to be extracted from organic compounds, in the absence of respiratory substrates such as oxygen. In this way, protons in solution in the intracellular medium serve as electron acceptors for the reoxidation of cofactors needed to metabolize organic compounds. In some photosynthetic micro-organisms, these fermentation pathways are also present; moreover, solar energy can stimulate hydrogen production, either from organic matter in the case of anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria (known as "photofermentation"), or from water in the case of certain cyanobacteria and microalgae (water biophotolysis).

These various microbial production methods have potential applications, but their implementation comes up against different types of biological and technological hurdles, the nature of which depends on the characteristics of the micro-organisms in question. Hydrogen synthesis coupled with oxygenic photosynthesis offers the prospect of clean, renewable production methods, using water and solar energy as the main resources. But the sensitivity of hydrogen-producing enzymes to oxygen is a major limitation to the development of processes based on this principle. Diverse engineering strategies, at the enzymatic, metabolic and process levels, need to be developed to ensure sustainable modes of H 2 production by these processes. Hydrogen production from photosynthetic microorganisms is implemented in devices known as "photobioreactors", in which production conditions are sought to be optimized. In the case of microalgae, the hydrogen production process, due to the succession of oxygenic and anoxic phases, can be carried out in two different photobioreactors or in a single one, either using strict control of nutrients and light received, or by fixing the microalgae on supports so as to easily change the culture medium.

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KEYWORDS

biohydrogen   |   hydrogenase   |   microalgae   |   photobioreactor   |   photofermentation   |   photosynthesis


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Hydrogen production by photosynthetic microorganisms