The Asian Age

Bacteria help turn Greek yogurt waste into fuel

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New York: Scientists have used bacteria to turn the leftover sugars and acids from Greek yogurt into molecules that could be used in bio- fuels or safe feedstock additives. Waste whey from Greek yogurt production is made up mostly of the familiar milk sugar lactose, the fruit sugar building block fructose, and the fermentati­on product lactic acid. Researcher­s at Cornell University in the US and the University of Tubingen in Germany used bacteria to turn this mixture into an extract containing two more useful compounds: caproic acid ( n- hexanoic acid) and caprylic acid ( n- octanoic acid). Both of these compounds are “green antimicrob­ials” that can be fed to livestock in lieu of antibiotic­s. With energy needs in mind, further processing could stitch the six-, seven-, and eight- carbon backbones of the obtained molecules into the chains of up to 14 needed to qualify as “dropin” biofuels for jet fuel. Both options have economic and social allure, researcher­s said. “The agricultur­al market might seem smaller, but it has a very large carbon footprint, and turning acid whey into a feedstock that animals can eat is an important example of the closed cycles that we need in a sustainabl­e society,” said Lars Angenent, senior author of the study published in the journal Joule. “The fuel market, of course, operates at a lower price, but its demand is virtually unlimited,” said Angenent. Traditiona­lly, suppressin­g oxygen while feeding biodegrada­ble waste to microbes results in the production of methane- rich gas through anaerobic digestion.

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