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Wastewater use in algae production for generation of renewable resources: a review and preliminary results

Microalgae feedstock production can be integrated with wastewater and industrial sources of carbon dioxide. This study reviews the literature on algae grown on wastewater and includes a preliminary analysis of algal production based on anaerobic digestion sludge centrate from the Howard F. Curren Ad...

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Autores principales: Dalrymple, Omatoyo K, Halfhide, Trina, Udom, Innocent, Gilles, Benjamin, Wolan, John, Zhang, Qiong, Ergas, Sarina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3561657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23289706
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2046-9063-9-2
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author Dalrymple, Omatoyo K
Halfhide, Trina
Udom, Innocent
Gilles, Benjamin
Wolan, John
Zhang, Qiong
Ergas, Sarina
author_facet Dalrymple, Omatoyo K
Halfhide, Trina
Udom, Innocent
Gilles, Benjamin
Wolan, John
Zhang, Qiong
Ergas, Sarina
author_sort Dalrymple, Omatoyo K
collection PubMed
description Microalgae feedstock production can be integrated with wastewater and industrial sources of carbon dioxide. This study reviews the literature on algae grown on wastewater and includes a preliminary analysis of algal production based on anaerobic digestion sludge centrate from the Howard F. Curren Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant (HFC AWTP) in Tampa, Florida and secondary effluent from the City of Lakeland wastewater treatment facilities in Lakeland, Florida. It was demonstrated that a mixed culture of wild algae species could successfully be grown on wastewater nutrients and potentially scaled to commercial production. Algae have demonstrated the ability to naturally colonize low-nutrient effluent water in a wetland treatment system utilized by the City of Lakeland. The results from these experiments show that the algae grown in high strength wastewater from the HFC AWTP are light-limited when cultivated indoor since more than 50% of the outdoor illumination is attenuated in the greenhouse. An analysis was performed to determine the mass of algae that can be supported by the wastewater nutrients (mainly nitrogen and phosphorous) available from the two Florida cities. The study was guided by the growth and productivity data obtained for algal growth in the photobioreactors in operation at the University of South Florida. In the analysis, nutrients and light are assumed to be limited, while CO(2) is abundantly available. There is some limitation on land, especially since the HFC AWTP is located at the Port of Tampa. The temperature range in Tampa is assumed to be suitable for algal growth year round. Assuming that the numerous technical challenges to achieving commercial-scale algal production can be met, the results presented suggest that an excess of 71 metric tons per hectare per year of algal biomass can be produced. Two energy production options were considered; liquid biofuels from feedstock with high lipid content, and biogas generation from anaerobic digestion of algae biomass. The total potential oil volume was determined to be approximately 337,500 gallons per year, which may result in the annual production of 270,000 gallons of biodiesel when 80% conversion efficiency is assumed. This production level would be able to sustain approximately 450 cars per year on average. Potential biogas production was estimated to be above 415,000 kg/yr, the equivalent of powering close to 500 homes for a year.
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spelling pubmed-35616572013-02-05 Wastewater use in algae production for generation of renewable resources: a review and preliminary results Dalrymple, Omatoyo K Halfhide, Trina Udom, Innocent Gilles, Benjamin Wolan, John Zhang, Qiong Ergas, Sarina Aquat Biosyst Research Microalgae feedstock production can be integrated with wastewater and industrial sources of carbon dioxide. This study reviews the literature on algae grown on wastewater and includes a preliminary analysis of algal production based on anaerobic digestion sludge centrate from the Howard F. Curren Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant (HFC AWTP) in Tampa, Florida and secondary effluent from the City of Lakeland wastewater treatment facilities in Lakeland, Florida. It was demonstrated that a mixed culture of wild algae species could successfully be grown on wastewater nutrients and potentially scaled to commercial production. Algae have demonstrated the ability to naturally colonize low-nutrient effluent water in a wetland treatment system utilized by the City of Lakeland. The results from these experiments show that the algae grown in high strength wastewater from the HFC AWTP are light-limited when cultivated indoor since more than 50% of the outdoor illumination is attenuated in the greenhouse. An analysis was performed to determine the mass of algae that can be supported by the wastewater nutrients (mainly nitrogen and phosphorous) available from the two Florida cities. The study was guided by the growth and productivity data obtained for algal growth in the photobioreactors in operation at the University of South Florida. In the analysis, nutrients and light are assumed to be limited, while CO(2) is abundantly available. There is some limitation on land, especially since the HFC AWTP is located at the Port of Tampa. The temperature range in Tampa is assumed to be suitable for algal growth year round. Assuming that the numerous technical challenges to achieving commercial-scale algal production can be met, the results presented suggest that an excess of 71 metric tons per hectare per year of algal biomass can be produced. Two energy production options were considered; liquid biofuels from feedstock with high lipid content, and biogas generation from anaerobic digestion of algae biomass. The total potential oil volume was determined to be approximately 337,500 gallons per year, which may result in the annual production of 270,000 gallons of biodiesel when 80% conversion efficiency is assumed. This production level would be able to sustain approximately 450 cars per year on average. Potential biogas production was estimated to be above 415,000 kg/yr, the equivalent of powering close to 500 homes for a year. BioMed Central 2013-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3561657/ /pubmed/23289706 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2046-9063-9-2 Text en Copyright ©2013 Dalrymple et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Dalrymple, Omatoyo K
Halfhide, Trina
Udom, Innocent
Gilles, Benjamin
Wolan, John
Zhang, Qiong
Ergas, Sarina
Wastewater use in algae production for generation of renewable resources: a review and preliminary results
title Wastewater use in algae production for generation of renewable resources: a review and preliminary results
title_full Wastewater use in algae production for generation of renewable resources: a review and preliminary results
title_fullStr Wastewater use in algae production for generation of renewable resources: a review and preliminary results
title_full_unstemmed Wastewater use in algae production for generation of renewable resources: a review and preliminary results
title_short Wastewater use in algae production for generation of renewable resources: a review and preliminary results
title_sort wastewater use in algae production for generation of renewable resources: a review and preliminary results
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3561657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23289706
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2046-9063-9-2
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