4.7 Article

Algae in wastewater treatment, mechanism, and application of biomass for production of value-added product

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 309, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119688

Keywords

Algae; Wastewater treatment; Remediation; Cellular composition; Resource recovery

Funding

  1. Purdue University, Indiana, USA

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This article introduces the potential of algae in wastewater treatment and resource recovery. Through mechanisms such as biosorption, bioaccumulation, and intracellular degradation, algae can effectively remediate toxic pollutants. It also highlights the need for ecofriendly and sustainable alternatives before discharging wastewater into the natural environment. Additionally, algae have potential as a feedstock for various industrial applications, such as biofuel production.
The pollutants can enter water bodies at various point and non-point sources, and wastewater discharge remains a major pathway. Wastewater treatment effectively reduces contaminants, it is expensive and requires an ecofriendly and sustainable alternative approach to reduce treatment costs. Algae have recently emerged as a potentially cost-effective method to remediate toxic pollutants through the mechanism of biosorption, bioaccumulation, and intracellular degradation. Hence, before discharging the wastewater into the natural environment better solutions for environmental resource recovery and sustainable developments can be applied. More importantly, algae are a potential feedstock material for various industrial applications such as biofuel production. Currently, researchers are developing algae as a source for pharmaceuticals, biofuels, food additives, and bio-fertilizers. This review mainly focused on the potential of algae and their specific mechanisms involved in wastewater treatment and energy recovery systems leading to important industrial precursors. The review is highly beneficial for scientists, wastewater treatment plant operators, freshwater managers, and industrial communities to support the sustainable development of natural resources.

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