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Recycling of nutrient medium to improve productivity in large-scale microalgal culture using a hybrid electrochemical water treatment system.
Jwa, Eunjin; Na, Oh Soo; Jeung, Yoon-Cheul; Jeong, Namjo; Nam, Joo-Youn; Lee, Sekyung.
Affiliation
  • Jwa E; Jeju Global Research Center, Korea Institute of Energy Research, 200 Haemajihaean-ro, Gujwa-eup, Jeju 63359, Republic of Korea. Electronic address: jej1208@kier.re.kr.
  • Na OS; B.ROOT.LAB Limited Company, 10 Sancheondandong-gil, Jeju 63243, Republic of Korea.
  • Jeung YC; Jeju Global Research Center, Korea Institute of Energy Research, 200 Haemajihaean-ro, Gujwa-eup, Jeju 63359, Republic of Korea.
  • Jeong N; Jeju Global Research Center, Korea Institute of Energy Research, 200 Haemajihaean-ro, Gujwa-eup, Jeju 63359, Republic of Korea.
  • Nam JY; Jeju Global Research Center, Korea Institute of Energy Research, 200 Haemajihaean-ro, Gujwa-eup, Jeju 63359, Republic of Korea.
  • Lee S; B.ROOT.LAB Limited Company, 10 Sancheondandong-gil, Jeju 63243, Republic of Korea.
Water Res ; 246: 120683, 2023 Nov 01.
Article de En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37801985
ABSTRACT
Recycling and reusing of nutrient media in microalgal cultivation are important strategies to reduce water consumption and nutrient costs. However, these approaches have limitations, e.g., a decrease in biomass production, (because as reused media can inhibit biomass growth). To address these limitations, we applied a novel membrane filtration‒electrolysis‒ultraviolet hybrid water treatment method capable of laboratory-to-large-scale operation to increase biomass productivity and enable nutrient medium disinfection and recycling. In laboratory-scale experiments, electrolysis effectively remove the biological contaminants from the spent nutrient medium, resulting in a high on-site removal efficiency of dissolved organic carbon (DOC; 80.3 ± 5 %) and disinfection (99.5 ± 0.2 %). Compared to the results for the recycling of nutrient medium without water treatment, electrolysis resulted in a 1.5-fold increase in biomass production, which was attributable to the removal of biological inhibitors from electrochemically produced oxidants (mainly OCl-). In scaled-up applications, the hybrid system improved the quality of the recycled nutrient medium, with 85 ± 2 % turbidity removal, 75 ± 3 % DOC removal, and 99.5 ± 2 % disinfection efficiency, which was beneficial for biomass growth by removing biological inhibitors. After applying the hybrid water treatment method, we achieved a Spirulina biomass production of 0.47 ± 0.03 g L-1, similar to that obtained using a fresh medium (0.53 ± 0.02 g L-1). The on-site disinfection process described herein is practical and offers a cost-saving and environmental friendly alternative for nutrient medium recycling and reusing water in mass and sustainable cultivation of microalgae.
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Texte intégral: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Base de données: MEDLINE Sujet principal: Purification de l'eau / Microalgues Langue: En Journal: Water Res Année: 2023 Type de document: Article

Texte intégral: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Base de données: MEDLINE Sujet principal: Purification de l'eau / Microalgues Langue: En Journal: Water Res Année: 2023 Type de document: Article