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Microalgae cultivation using undiluted anaerobic digestate by introducing aerobic nitrification–desulfurization treatment
Author(s) -
Mutsumi Sekine,
Akari Yoshida,
Shinichi Akizuki,
Masatoshi Kishi,
Tatsuki Toda
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
water science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.406
H-Index - 137
eISSN - 1996-9732
pISSN - 0273-1223
DOI - 10.2166/wst.2020.153
Subject(s) - nitrification , chemistry , digestate , effluent , pulp and paper industry , wastewater , biomass (ecology) , chlorella sorokiniana , flue gas desulfurization , biogas , ammonium , hydraulic retention time , anaerobic digestion , nitrogen , environmental chemistry , environmental engineering , agronomy , botany , chlorella , environmental science , biology , algae , ecology , organic chemistry , methane , engineering
A novel coupling process using an aerobic bacterial reactor with nitrification and sulfur-oxidization functions followed by a microalgal reactor was proposed for simultaneous biogas desulfurization and anaerobic digestion effluent (ADE) treatment. ADE nitrified by bacteria has a potential to be directly used as a culture medium for microalgae because ammonium nitrogen, including inhibitory free ammonia (NH 3 ), has been converted to harmless NO 3 - . To demonstrate this hypothesis, Chlorella sorokiniana NIES-2173, which has ordinary NH 3 olerance; that is, 1.6 mM of EC 50 compared with other species, was cultivated using untreated/treated ADE. Compared with the use of a synthetic medium, when using ADE with 1-10-fold dilutions, the specific growth rate and growth yield maximally decreased by 44% and 88%, respectively. In contrast, the algal growth using undiluted ADE treated by nitrification-desulfurization was almost the same as with using synthetic medium. It was also revealed that 50% of PO 4 3- and most metal concentrations of ADE decreased following nitrification-desulfurization treatment. Moreover, upon NaOH addition for pH adjustment, the salinity increased to 0.66%. The decrease in metals mitigates the bioconcentration of toxic heavy metals from wastewater in microalgal biomass. Meanwhile, salt stress in microalgae and limiting nutrient supplementation, particularly for continuous cultivation, should be of concern.

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