4.4 Article

Sewage Water Treatment Using Chlorella Vulgaris Microalgae for Simultaneous Nutrient Separation and Biomass Production

Journal

SEPARATIONS
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/separations10040229

Keywords

bioremediation; wastewater treatment; circular economy; biomass; microalgae

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The recovery of wastewater is crucial for effective water resource management and addressing regional or seasonal water shortages. Using algae to clean wastewater provides significant benefits, including reducing the formation of hazardous solid sludge and creating valuable algal biomass through nutrient recycling. This study demonstrates the efficacy of microalgal bioremediation in simultaneously treating COD, NH3-N, and orthophosphate in domestic wastewater while enabling biomass production.
Recovery of wastewater is essential for better management of water resources and can aid in reducing regional or seasonal water shortages. When algae were used to clean wastewater, amazing benefits were guaranteed, such as a decrease in the formation of dangerous solid sludge and the creation of valuable algal biomass through recycling of the nutrients in the wastewater. The trace elements nitrogen, phosphorus, and others that microalgae need for cell development are frequently present in contaminated wastewater. Hence, microalgal bioremediation is used in this study as an effective technique for the simultaneous treatment of COD, NH3-N, and orthophosphate from domestic wastewater and biomass production. Different concentrations of wastewaters were used. The maximum removals attained were: 84% of COD on the fifth day using the lowest mixing ratio of 50%, 95% of ammoniacal nitrogen, and 97% of phosphorus. The highest biomass production was achieved at day 12, except for the mixing ratio of 80% where the growth rate increased until day 14 at 400 mg/L.

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