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- Title
- Polypropylene bundle attached multilayered Stigeoclonium biofilms cultivated in untreated sewage generate high biomass and lipid productivity
- Author(s)
- Byung-Hyuk Kim; Dong-Ho Kim; Jung-Woon Choi; Z Kang; Dae Hyun Cho; Ji Young Kim; Hee-Mock Oh; Hee-Sik Kim
- Bibliographic Citation
- Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology, vol. 25, no. 9, pp. 1547-1554
- Publication Year
- 2015
- Abstract
- The potential of microalgae biofuel has not been realized because of the low productivity and high costs associated with the current cultivation systems. In this study, a new low-cost and transparent attachment material was tested for cultivation of a filamentous algal strain, Stigeoclonium sp., isolated from wastewater. Initially, the different materials tested for Stigeoclonium cultivation in untreated wastewater were nylon mesh, polyethylene mesh, polypropylene bundle (PB), polycarbonate plate, and viscose rayon. Among the materials tested, PB led to a firm attachment, high biomass (53.22 g/m2, dry cell weight), and total lipid yield (5.8 g/m2) with no perceivable change in FAME profile. The Stigeoclonium-dominated biofilm consisted of bacteria and extracellular polysaccharide, which helped in biofilm formation and for effective wastewater treatment (viz., removal efficiency of total nitrogen and total phosphorus corresponded to ~38% and ~90%, respectively). PB also demonstrated high yields under multilayered cultivation in a single reactor treating wastewater. Hence, this system has several advantages over traditional suspended and attached systems, with possibility of increasing areal productivity three times using Stigeoclonium sp. Therefore, multilayered attached growth algal cultivation systems seem to be the future cultivation model for large-scale biodiesel production and wastewater treatment.
- Keyword
- Attachment materialBiofilmMultilayered cultureMunicipal wastewaterStigeoclonium sp.Algae
- ISSN
- 1017-7825
- Publisher
- Korea Soc-Assoc-Inst
- Full Text Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.4014/jmb.1501.01033
- Type
- Article
- Appears in Collections:
- Synthetic Biology and Bioengineering Research Institute > Cell Factory Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
- Files in This Item:
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