4.4 Article

Novel Fungal Pelletization-Assisted Technology for Algae Harvesting and Wastewater Treatment

Journal

APPLIED BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 167, Issue 2, Pages 214-228

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12010-012-9667-y

Keywords

Fungi pelletization; Microalgae algae harvesting; Municipal wastewater; Animal wastewater; Wastewater treatment

Funding

  1. University of Minnesota Initiative for Renewable Energy
  2. Environment and Metropolitan Council Environmental Services
  3. Legislative-Citizen Commission on Minnesota Resource
  4. MOE Biomass Engineering Center in China

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A novel fungi pelletization-assisted bioflocculation technology was developed for efficient algae harvesting and wastewater treatment. Microalga UMN235 and two locally isolated fungal species UMN F01 and UMN F02 were used to study the effect of various cultural conditions on pelletization process for fungi-algae complex. The results showed that pH was the key factor affecting formation of fungi-algae pellet, and pH could be controlled by adjusting glucose concentration and fungal spore number added. The best pelletization happened when adding 20 g/L glucose and approximately 1.2E8/L spores in BG-11 medium, under which almost 100 % of algal cells were captured onto the pellets with shorter retention time. The fungi-algae pellets can be easily harvested by simple filtration due to its large size (2-5 mm). The filtered fungi-algae pellets were reused as immobilized cells for treatment wastewaters and the nutrient removal rates of 100, 58.85, 89.83, and 62.53 % (for centrate) and 23.23, 44.68, 84.70, and 70.34 % (for diluted swine manure wastewater) for ammonium, total nitrogen, total phosphorus, and chemical oxygen demand, respectively, under both 1- and 2-day cultivations. The novel technology developed is highly promising compared with current algae harvesting and biological wastewater treatment technologies in the literature.

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