Rocamora, IldefonsoWagland, Stuart T.Hassard, FrancisVilla, RaffaellaPeces, MiriamFotidis, Ioannis A.Simpson, Edmon W.Fernández, OliverBajón Fernández, Yadira2025-03-202025-03-202025-04-01Rocamora I, Wagland ST, Hassard F, et al., (2025) Supplementation strategies to control propionic acid accumulation resulting from ammonia inhibition in dry anaerobic digestion: osmoprotectants, activated carbon and trace elements. Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering, Volume 13, Issue 2, March 2025, Article number 1160152213-3437https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jece.2025.116015https://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/23630Propionic acid accumulation in anaerobic digestion is a common sign of inhibition at high ammonia levels. To mitigate accumulation three supplementations were tested: osmoprotectants, trace elements and activated carbon. Activated carbon and osmoprotectants (MgCl2) achieved a 28 % increase in methane yield and a 3-fold reduction in hydrogen partial pressure compared with the control. Trace elements supplementation increased methane formation by 18 % without preventing instability. No supplementation avoided propionic accumulation, although MgCl2 delayed it. Activated carbon and MgCl2 supported proliferation of strict hydrogenotrophs, increasing microbial redundance with expected positive impacts on process resilience. Evidence beyond previous studies on the role of retention time as a control parameter of versatile archaea's methanogenic pathway is also provided. As retention time is reduced, syntrophic acetate oxidising bacteria are washed out of the system, likely resulting from an increase in their doubling time with inhibitors accumulation, preventing hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis and supporting previous observations of Methanosarcina being forced to conduct acetoclastic methanogenesis. Longer retention times to accommodate longer doubling times or alleviation of inhibition with activated carbon and MgCl2 supported retention of syntrophic acetate oxidising bacteria, enabling strict hydrogenotrophic archaea to proliferate. These supplementations would allow operation of industrial scale ADs at shorter retention times and higher throughputs. Results suggest that osmoprotectants and activated carbon addition were linked to a reduction in archaea's osmotic pressure and enhanced direct interspecies transfer, respectively, leading to increased methane formation despite propionic levels.enAttribution 4.0 Internationalhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Propionic degradation indexTrace elementsInhibited steady stateOrganic fraction municipal solid wasteActivated carbon40 Engineering4011 Environmental Engineering3406 Physical chemistry4004 Chemical engineeringSupplementation strategies to control propionic acid accumulation resulting from ammonia inhibition in dry anaerobic digestion: osmoprotectants, activated carbon and trace elementsArticle2213-3437565777116015132