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      In silico optimization for production of biomass and biofuel feedstocks from microalgae

      research-article
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      Journal of Applied Phycology
      Springer Netherlands
      Microalgae, Biomass, Biofuel, Optimisation, Nutrients

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          Abstract

          Optimization of the production rate of biomass rich in N (e.g. for protein) or C (e.g. for biofuels) is key to making algae-based technology commercially viable. Creating the appropriate conditions to achieve this is a challenge; operational permutations are extensive, while geographical variations localise effective methods of cultivation when utilising natural illumination. As an aid to identifying suitable operational envelopes, a mechanistic acclimative model of microalgae growth is used for the first time to simulate production in virtual systems over a broad latitudinal range. Optimization of production is achieved through selection of strain characteristics, system optical depth, nutrient supply, and dilution regimes for different geographic and seasonal illumination profiles. Results reveal contrasting requirements for optimising biomass vs biofuels production. Trade-offs between maximising areal and volumetric production while conserving resources, plus hydrodynamic limits on reactor design, lead to quantifiable constraints for optimal operational permutations. Simulations show how selection of strains with a high maximum growth rate, U m , remains the prime factor enabling high productivity. Use of an f/2 growth medium with a culture dilution rate set at ~25 % of U m delivers sufficient nutrition for optimal biomass production. Further, sensitivity to the balance between areal and volumetric productivity leads to a well-defined critical depth at ~0.1 m at which areal biofuel production peaks with use of a low concentration f/4 growth medium combined with a dilution rate ~15 % of U m . Such analyses, and developments thereof, will aid in developing a decision support tool to enable more productive methods of cultivation.

          Electronic supplementary material

          The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s10811-014-0342-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

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          Most cited references54

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          Primary Production of the Biosphere: Integrating Terrestrial and Oceanic Components

          C Field (1998)
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            Microalgae for oil: strain selection, induction of lipid synthesis and outdoor mass cultivation in a low-cost photobioreactor.

            Thirty microalgal strains were screened in the laboratory for their biomass productivity and lipid content. Four strains (two marine and two freshwater), selected because robust, highly productive and with a relatively high lipid content, were cultivated under nitrogen deprivation in 0.6-L bubbled tubes. Only the two marine microalgae accumulated lipid under such conditions. One of them, the eustigmatophyte Nannochloropsis sp. F&M-M24, which attained 60% lipid content after nitrogen starvation, was grown in a 20-L Flat Alveolar Panel photobioreactor to study the influence of irradiance and nutrient (nitrogen or phosphorus) deprivation on fatty acid accumulation. Fatty acid content increased with high irradiances (up to 32.5% of dry biomass) and following both nitrogen and phosphorus deprivation (up to about 50%). To evaluate its lipid production potential under natural sunlight, the strain was grown outdoors in 110-L Green Wall Panel photobioreactors under nutrient sufficient and deficient conditions. Lipid productivity increased from 117 mg/L/day in nutrient sufficient media (with an average biomass productivity of 0.36 g/L/day and 32% lipid content) to 204 mg/L/day (with an average biomass productivity of 0.30 g/L/day and more than 60% final lipid content) in nitrogen deprived media. In a two-phase cultivation process (a nutrient sufficient phase to produce the inoculum followed by a nitrogen deprived phase to boost lipid synthesis) the oil production potential could be projected to be more than 90 kg per hectare per day. This is the first report of an increase of both lipid content and areal lipid productivity attained through nutrient deprivation in an outdoor algal culture. The experiments showed that this marine eustigmatophyte has the potential for an annual production of 20 tons of lipid per hectare in the Mediterranean climate and of more than 30 tons of lipid per hectare in sunny tropical areas.
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              Second Generation Biofuels: High-Efficiency Microalgae for Biodiesel Production

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +44 (0) 1792 295564 , p.kenny@swansea.ac.uk
                +44 (0) 1792 295726 , k.j.flynn@swansea.ac.uk
                Journal
                J Appl Phycol
                J. Appl. Phycol
                Journal of Applied Phycology
                Springer Netherlands (Dordrecht )
                0921-8971
                1573-5176
                1 June 2014
                1 June 2014
                2015
                : 27
                : 33-48
                Affiliations
                Centre for Sustainable Aquatic Research, Department of Biosciences, College of Science, Swansea University, Singleton Park, Swansea, SA2 8PP UK
                Article
                342
                10.1007/s10811-014-0342-2
                4297880
                e6cd09b0-4eca-4b95-9424-894dafc70485
                © The Author(s) 2014

                Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.

                History
                : 18 February 2014
                : 8 May 2014
                : 8 May 2014
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2015

                Plant science & Botany
                microalgae,biomass,biofuel,optimisation,nutrients
                Plant science & Botany
                microalgae, biomass, biofuel, optimisation, nutrients

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