4.7 Article

A comprehensive analysis of an effective flocculation method for high quality microalgal biomass harvesting

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 752, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.141708

Keywords

Microalgae; Flocculation; Polyacrylamide; Chitosan; Biomass recovery; Biomass harvesting

Funding

  1. Climate Change Cluster (C3) of the University of Technology Sydney (UTS, Australia)

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Flocculation is a cost-effective method for microalgae biomass harvesting, with the efficiency depending on the species involved. Polyacrylamide flocculants showed high efficiency in harvesting, but the impact on different algal species varied in terms of compromised cells and product release. The pilot-scale demonstration using polyacrylamide maintained high efficiency and biomass quality similar to laboratory-scale results, indicating its potential for industrial application without the need for pre-treatment.
Flocculation is a low-cost harvesting technique for microalgae biomass production, but flocculation efficiency is species dependent. In this study, we investigated the efficacy of two synthetic (polyacrylamide) and one natural (chitosan) flocculants against three algal species: the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp., the freshwater Chlorella vulgaris, and the marine Phaeodactylum tricornutum at laboratory and pilot scales to evaluate harvesting efficiency, biomass integrity and media recycling. Growth phase affected the harvesting efficiency of the eukaryotic microalgae. The flocculation was optimal at stationary phase with high flocculation efficiency achieved using polyacrylamides at 24-36 mg/g dry weight. The effect of the flocculants on the harvested biomass was investigated. The flocculated Synechocystis sp. showed a higher proportion of compromised cells compared to C. vulgaris and P. tricornutum likely due to differences in cell walls composition. Compromised cells could lead to the release of valuable products into the surrounding growth media during flocculation. The residual culture media was recycled once with no impact on cell growth for all treatments and algal species. The flocculation technique was demonstrated at pilot-scale using 350 L microalgal suspension, showing an efficiency of 82-90% at a polyacrylamide dosage of 6.5-10 mg/L. This efficiency and the biomass quality are comparable to the laboratory-scale results. Overall, results indicate that polyacrylamide flocculants work on a wide range of species without the need for pre-treatment. The information generated in this study can contribute to making the microalgae industry more competitive. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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