Nutrient removal efficiency of green algal strains at high phosphate concentrations.
Creators
- 1. University of Cassino
- 2. University of Naples Federico II
- 3. UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education
Description
The effects of autotrophic and mixotrophic conditions on microalgae growth and nutrient removal efficiency from synthetic wastewater by different microalgae were investigated. Although several studies have demonstrated the suitability of microalgae technologies for ammonia-rich wastewater treatment, only a few have been used for treatment of phosphate-rich industrial wastewaters. In this work, six microalgae were cultivated in batch mode in a growth medium with a high phosphate concentration (0.74 Mm PO4 3--P) and different carbon sources (ammonium acetate and sodium bicarbonate) without CO2 supplementation or pH adjustment. Their potential for nutrient removal and biomass generation was estimated. The biomass growth in the reactors was modeled and the data aligned to the Verhulst model with R2 > 0.93 in all cases. Chlorella pyrenoidosa ACUF_808 showed the highest final biomass productivity of 106.21 and 75.71 mg·L-1·d-1 in media with inorganic and organic carbon sources, respectively. The highest phosphorus removal efficiency was 32% with Chlorella vulgaris ACUF_809, while the nitrate removal efficiency in all reactors exceeded 93%. The coupled cultivation of the novel isolated strains of C. pyrenoidosa and C. vulgaris under mixotrophic conditions supplemented with ammonium acetate might be a promising solution for simultaneous nitrate and phosphate removal from phosphorus-rich wastewaters.
Open Access
Licence Attribution (CC BY)
Publisher Website
Access full text
Publication Details
Journal article
Journal:
Water science and technology : a journal of the International Association on Water Pollution Research
Publisher:
IWA Publishing
ISSN:
02731223
Volume:
80
Pages:
1832-1843
Funding
Financial Support
Erasmus Mundus Joint Doctorate Programme, Environmental Technologies for Contaminated Solids, Soils and Sediments, grant agreement — Grant: FPA no. 2010-0009
Read more
References
Microalgal species for sustainable biomass/lipid production using wastewater as ...
Read more
006-290-639-378-132
Read more
Biomass production and nutrient assimilation by a novel microalga, Monoraphidium...
Read more
Mixotrophic cultivation of Chlorella pyrenoidosa with diluted primary piggery wa...
Read more
Effect of acetate on growth and ammonium uptake in the microalga Scenedesmus obl...
Read more
Showing first 5 of 38 references.
Scholarly Citations
MeSH Terms
MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) is the NLM controlled vocabulary for indexing biomedical articles.
Click any term to view its definition and hierarchy.