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Question
Do you think microbes can also be used as source of energy? If yes, how?
Solution
Microbes can be a source of energy. Biogas is a mixture of gases created from degradable organic matter by anaerobic microbes that can be utilised as fuel. The microorganisms used in biogas production are mostly facultative and strictly anaerobic bacteria. The most important of them are methanogenic archaebacteria, such as Methanobacterium. Methane (50-68% of biogas) is the most inflammable component. The remaining gases are CO2 (25-35%), hydrogen (1-5%), nitrogen (2-7%), oxygen (0-0.1%), and H2S (traces). Biogas is commercially produced in the biogas plant. The plant is fed a mixture of dung and water (1:1 ratio). Dung is cattle excreta, sometimes known as 'gobar', which is why the plant is also known as a 'gobar gas plant'. The waste from cattle is an excellent source of plant-derived cellulose material. Biogas is a fuel alternative to firewood, kerosene, dung cakes, electricity, and LPG. It is used for heating, cooking, lighting, and irrigation. It is considered an environmentally benign and pollution-free form of energy.
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