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Öğe Effect of Light Intensity, Wavelength and Illumination Protocol on Hydrogen Production in Photobioreactors(Bentham Science Publ, 2012) Uyar, Basar; Yucel, Meral; Gunduz, Ufuk; Eroglu, InciPhotofermentative hydrogen production is a bioprocess in which photosynthetic purple nonsulfur bacteria grow heterotrophically on organic acids like acetic acid, lactic acid and butyric acid and produce hydrogen using light energy under anaerobic conditions. Two enzymes are specifically involved in hydrogen production, namely nitrogenase and hydrogenase. While nitrogenases produce hydrogen under nitrogen-limited conditions acting as ATP-dependent hydrogenase, hydrogenases have the ability for both production and consumption of molecular hydrogen depending on the type of hydrogenase and physiological conditions. Photofermentation process can be achieved in a wide variety of conditions such as in batch or continuous mode, upon artificial or solar illumination, utilizing various carbon and nitrogen sources including food industry wastewater and dark fermentation effluents. Panel and tubular photobioreactors are the most applicable bioreactor types since they ensure simple design, reasonable material and production costs and high light energy utilization. Physiological parameters such as pH, temperature, medium composition and light intensity control the yield and hydrogen productivity of the bacteria. Hydrogen productivity and yield can also be increased by using genetically modified bacterial strains or immobilization of bacteria. Genetic studies focus on development of mutant strains by disrupting the uptake hydrogenase genes, altering pigmentation and blocking alternative by-product biosynthesis. Techno-economic evaluations show that photofermentative hydrogen production process is very near to the commercialization stage, however demo scale experience is necessary to solve some problems such as low rate of hydrogen production and the cost associated with photobioreactor scale-up. Furthermore, recent studies are trying to integrate photofermentation to dark fermentation to have an enhanced hydrogen production yield. Finally, the whole process could end up with a fuel cell application where the produced hydrogen is stored for future uses.Öğe Evaluation of hydrogen production by Rhodobacter sphaeroides OU001 and its hupSL deficient mutant using acetate and malate as carbon sources(PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD, 2009) Kars, Goekhan; Gunduz, Ufuk; Yucel, Meral; Rakhely, Gabor; Kovacs, Kornel L.; Eroglu, InciRhodobacter sphaeroides O.U.001 is one of the candidates for photobiological hydrogen production among purple non-sulfur bacteria. Hydrogen is produced by Mo-nitrogenase from organic acids such as malate or lactate. A hupSL in frame deletion mutant strain was constructed without using any antibiotic resistance gene. The hydrogen production potential of the R. sphaeroides O.U.001 and its newly constructed hupSL deleted mutant strain in acetate media was evaluated and compared with malate containing media. The hupSL(-) R. sphaeroides produced 2.42 l H-2/l culture and 0.25 l H-2/l culture in 15 mM malate and 30 mM acetate containing media, respectively, as compared to the wild type cells which evolved 1.97 l H-2/l culture and 0.21 l H-2/l culture in malate and acetate containing media, correspondingly. According to the results, hupSL- R. sphaeroides is a better hydrogen producer but acetate alone does not seem to be an efficient carbon source for photo-heterotrophic H-2 production by R. sphaeroides. (C) 2009 International Association for Hydrogen Energy. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.