Silvia Greses
IMDEA
36 Papers
7 Citations
Silvia Greses is an academic researcher from IMDEA. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Anaerobic digestion. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 15 publications. Previous affiliations of Silvia Greses include University of Valencia.
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Papers
Agroindustrial waste as a resource for volatile fatty acids production via anaerobic fermentation
TL;DR: This study evaluated the feasibility of the anaerobic digestion as a sustainable valorisation strategy for volatile fatty acids production from agroindustrial waste (cucumber, tomato and lettuce) and found that the developed microbial community exhibited high hydrolytic and acidogenic activities associated to carbohydrates degradation.
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Impact of Organic Loading Rate in Volatile Fatty Acids Production and Population Dynamics Using Microalgae Biomass as Substrate.
TL;DR: The microbial adaptation of Euryarchaeota species at the highest OLR was shown, evidencing one of the main challenges in VFAs production (out-competition of archaea community to avoid product consumption), and stepwise OLR increase can be regarded as a tool to promote VF as productions.
Short-chain fatty acids and hydrogen production in one single anaerobic fermentation stage using carbohydrate-rich food waste
TL;DR: Overall, melon and watermelon wastes bioconversion efficiencies into H2 and SCFAs reached 64.0 and 58.7%, demonstrating the successful co-production of different bioproducts in a single-stage fermentation by establishing proper operational conditions.
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Microbial community characterization during anaerobic digestion of Scenedesmus spp. under mesophilic and thermophilic conditions
TL;DR: The abundant syntrophic bacteria and the detection of hydrogenotrophic methanogens in the thermophilic CSTR suggest that the hydrogenOTrophic pathway was the dominant pathway for methane production in this reactor.
AnMBR, reclaimed water and fertigation: Two case studies in Italy and Spain to assess economic and technological feasibility and CO2 emissions within the EU Innovation Deal initiative
Antonio Jiménez-Benítez,Francisco Javier Ferrer,Silvia Greses,A. Ruiz-Martinez,Francesco Fatone,Anna Laura Eusebi,Nieves Mondéjar,José Ferrer,Aurora Seco +8 more
TL;DR: The use of anaerobic membrane bioreactor (AnMBR) technology on urban wastewater can help to alleviate droughts, by reusing the water and nutrients embedded in the effluent in agriculture (fertigation) in line with Circular economy principles as discussed by the authors.
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