4.2 Article

A laboratory study of microalgae-based ammonia gas mitigation with potential application for improving air quality in animal production operations

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AIR & WASTE MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
Volume 64, Issue 3, Pages 330-339

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10962247.2013.859185

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Iowa Space Grant Consortium, Iowa State University Bailey Foundation Award
  2. Korea Institute of Energy Technology Evaluation and Planning (KETEP)

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Ammonia gas emission is a major concern in concentrated animal production operations. It not only reduces the manure value as fertilizer due to nitrogen loss, but also has considerable environmental consequences for both animals and ecosystem. In this work, a microalgae culture system was developed as an ammonia gas bioscrubber to reduce ammonia gas emission. The green algae Scenedesmus dimorphus was grown in a flat-panel photobioreactor aerated with ammonia-laden air. A continuous culture was performed at different operational conditions including dilution rate (D = 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3 day(-1)), ammonia gas loading rate (9.4, 19.3, 28.9, 39.9, 55.6 mg/L-day), and medium pH (5, 6, 7, and 8). The alga culture at 0.1 day(-1) dilution rate, 39.9 mg/L-day ammonia gas loading rate, and pH 7 resulted in the highest cell density and biomass productivity. In order to provide a wide spectrum evaluation of the algae-based ammonia mitigation system, four parameters were determined, including ammonia removal rate, overall ammonia gas removal efficiency, cellular ammonia consumption rate, and cell yield based on ammonia input. Depending on the operational conditions used, the maximum values of those four evaluative parameters were 50.92 2.91 mg/L-day of ammonia removal rate, 94.90 +/- 1.87% of ammonia removal efficiency, 0.0597 +/- 0.0024 g NH3/g cell-day of cellular ammonia consumption rate, and 19.40 +/- 2.52 g cell/g NH3 of cell yield based on ammonia. It was also found that the majority of nitrogen in the ammonia gas was assimilated by the algal cells. At D = 0.1 day(-1), 39.9 mg/L-day of ammonia gas loading rate and pH 7, algal biomass assimilated 98.6% of nitrogen contained in the ammonia gas input, with less than 5% of inlet ammonia gas was exhausted after the algal treatment. Implications: This study demonstrated the effectiveness of using microalgae for mitigating ammonia gas emission from animal production operations. The results enabled us to better understand the mechanisms of ammonia assimilation by microalgae, the engineering design parameters for the process scale up, and the economic viability of the system. Eventually, it will lead to a novel, alternative method for mitigating ammonia gas emission from concentrated animal operations while producing biomass as high-quality feed ingredient.

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