SFB 1313 Publication by Simon Emmert

August 7, 2020 /

Paper title: "Importance of specific substrate utilization by microbes in microbially enhanced coal-bed methane production: A modelling study"
Journal: International Journal of Coal Geology (ELESVIER)
[Picture: Simon Emmert]

New SFB 1313 publication by doctoral researcher Simon Emmert (research projects C04 and C-X1), principal investigator Holger Class (research projects C04 and C-X1), Katherine J. Davis, and Robin Gerlach, published in International Journal of Coal Geology. >>> "Importance of specific substrate utilization by microbes in microbially enhanced coal-bed methane production: A modelling study"

Abstract

This study addresses a major gap in the understanding and control of microbially enhanced coal-bed methane (MECBM) production. A mathematical and conceptual model comprises a food-web that includes two types of bacteria and three types of archaea representing substrate-specific members of the community; the microbial community members are potentially interacting by competing for or being inhibited by substrates or products of other microbial community members. The model was calibrated using data sets from two different experimental setups. The calibrated model effectively predicted the methane concentrations within a 7% range of deviation from the experimental results. The results of additional batch experiments using varied conditions are also reproduced in an attempt to validate the model and to test the hypothesis of amendment-induced stimulation of microbial community members capable of converting coal into substrates available to methane producing microbes. This study significantly enhances the understanding of the complex interactions between microbial activity, substrate-specificity and bio-availability of coal for methane production, and provides the basis for including hydraulic flow and transport processes into future mathematical models important for the design and implementation of more sustainable methods of harvesting methane from un-mineable coalbeds.

Doctoral researcher Simon Emmert, Department of Hydromechanics and Modelling of Hydrosystems (LH2)

Publication "Importance of specific substrate utilization by microbes in microbially enhanced coal-bed methane production: A modelling study"

Schematic pore scale illustration of relevant components and processes included in the conceptual model.

SFB 1313 research project C04: "Control-volume-based approaches to model flow and transport in fractured/fracturing porous media including biological and chemical pore-space alteration"

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