Physico-chemical and biological changes during co-composting of model kitchen waste, rice bran and dried leaves with different microbial inoculants

Disposal of food waste either by land-filling or incineration will cause environmental pollution and engaged in high treatment cost. Composting can be a viable food waste management, however, less research works have focused on the degradation of small scale kitchen waste. In this study, co-composti...

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Main Authors: Fan, Yee Van, Lee, Chew Tin, Leow, Chee Woh, Chua, Lee Suan, Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji
Format: Article
Published: Malaysian Society of Analytical Sciences 2016
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/71350/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85003634491&doi=10.17576%2fmjas-2016-2006-25&partnerID=40&md5=f213eb197384b9b7e2b5caeade55e5d8
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spelling my.utm.713502017-11-20T08:30:35Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/71350/ Physico-chemical and biological changes during co-composting of model kitchen waste, rice bran and dried leaves with different microbial inoculants Fan, Yee Van Lee, Chew Tin Leow, Chee Woh Chua, Lee Suan Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji TP Chemical technology Disposal of food waste either by land-filling or incineration will cause environmental pollution and engaged in high treatment cost. Composting can be a viable food waste management, however, less research works have focused on the degradation of small scale kitchen waste. In this study, co-composting of model kitchen waste, dried leaves and rice bran were inoculated with four different sources of microbial inoculants (MI) namely commercial Effective Microorganism (EM), Tempeh, Tapai, a mixture of Tempeh and Tapai and water as a control. It was found that the temperature of all four composting materials with MI can be heated up to a higher temperature (>50 \xB0C) than the control and produced less offensive smells. All composts ended with a neutral or weakly alkaline pH value (pH 7 - 8) and a C:N ratio of around 10 which indicating the maturation of composts. For enzymatic activities, the highest activity of amylase (73 - 129 U/g) and cellulase (75 - 148 U/g) occurred at the beginning of the composting process. The maximum activities of lipase (5 - 10 U/g) and protease (46 - 72 U/g) were at the middle stage of the composting process. The germination indexes of the five composts were larger than 100 indicating non-phytotoxic. Although the temperature profile and odour performance were outstanding in the presence of MI, most other parameters did not show significant differences when co-compositing of small scale model kitchen waste was carried out with an adequate initial C:N ratio and moisture content. Further study is needed to distinguish the potential beneficiary effects of MI for the composting of kitchen waste. Nevertheless, the comparable performance of Tempeh and Tapai with EM in composting suggested that Tempeh and Tapai can be used to substitute the function of EM as a cheaper and more available microbial source for the household. Malaysian Society of Analytical Sciences 2016 Article PeerReviewed Fan, Yee Van and Lee, Chew Tin and Leow, Chee Woh and Chua, Lee Suan and Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji (2016) Physico-chemical and biological changes during co-composting of model kitchen waste, rice bran and dried leaves with different microbial inoculants. Malaysian Journal of Analytical Sciences, 20 (6). pp. 1447-1457. ISSN 1394-2506 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85003634491&doi=10.17576%2fmjas-2016-2006-25&partnerID=40&md5=f213eb197384b9b7e2b5caeade55e5d8
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic TP Chemical technology
spellingShingle TP Chemical technology
Fan, Yee Van
Lee, Chew Tin
Leow, Chee Woh
Chua, Lee Suan
Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji
Physico-chemical and biological changes during co-composting of model kitchen waste, rice bran and dried leaves with different microbial inoculants
description Disposal of food waste either by land-filling or incineration will cause environmental pollution and engaged in high treatment cost. Composting can be a viable food waste management, however, less research works have focused on the degradation of small scale kitchen waste. In this study, co-composting of model kitchen waste, dried leaves and rice bran were inoculated with four different sources of microbial inoculants (MI) namely commercial Effective Microorganism (EM), Tempeh, Tapai, a mixture of Tempeh and Tapai and water as a control. It was found that the temperature of all four composting materials with MI can be heated up to a higher temperature (>50 \xB0C) than the control and produced less offensive smells. All composts ended with a neutral or weakly alkaline pH value (pH 7 - 8) and a C:N ratio of around 10 which indicating the maturation of composts. For enzymatic activities, the highest activity of amylase (73 - 129 U/g) and cellulase (75 - 148 U/g) occurred at the beginning of the composting process. The maximum activities of lipase (5 - 10 U/g) and protease (46 - 72 U/g) were at the middle stage of the composting process. The germination indexes of the five composts were larger than 100 indicating non-phytotoxic. Although the temperature profile and odour performance were outstanding in the presence of MI, most other parameters did not show significant differences when co-compositing of small scale model kitchen waste was carried out with an adequate initial C:N ratio and moisture content. Further study is needed to distinguish the potential beneficiary effects of MI for the composting of kitchen waste. Nevertheless, the comparable performance of Tempeh and Tapai with EM in composting suggested that Tempeh and Tapai can be used to substitute the function of EM as a cheaper and more available microbial source for the household.
format Article
author Fan, Yee Van
Lee, Chew Tin
Leow, Chee Woh
Chua, Lee Suan
Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji
author_facet Fan, Yee Van
Lee, Chew Tin
Leow, Chee Woh
Chua, Lee Suan
Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji
author_sort Fan, Yee Van
title Physico-chemical and biological changes during co-composting of model kitchen waste, rice bran and dried leaves with different microbial inoculants
title_short Physico-chemical and biological changes during co-composting of model kitchen waste, rice bran and dried leaves with different microbial inoculants
title_full Physico-chemical and biological changes during co-composting of model kitchen waste, rice bran and dried leaves with different microbial inoculants
title_fullStr Physico-chemical and biological changes during co-composting of model kitchen waste, rice bran and dried leaves with different microbial inoculants
title_full_unstemmed Physico-chemical and biological changes during co-composting of model kitchen waste, rice bran and dried leaves with different microbial inoculants
title_sort physico-chemical and biological changes during co-composting of model kitchen waste, rice bran and dried leaves with different microbial inoculants
publisher Malaysian Society of Analytical Sciences
publishDate 2016
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/71350/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85003634491&doi=10.17576%2fmjas-2016-2006-25&partnerID=40&md5=f213eb197384b9b7e2b5caeade55e5d8
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score 13.209306