AI Article Synopsis

  • Microalgae are promising for biofuel production due to their high growth rates and capability to thrive in wastewater, while also helping to purify it, but harvesting costs remain a significant barrier.
  • Researchers have isolated various microalgal biofilms that consist of diverse organisms and found that one particular biofilm (#52) can be used effectively for bioenergy production through fermentation.
  • Tailoring biofilms allows for improvements in wastewater treatment, optimization of fatty acids for biofuel, and enhanced concentration of microalgal cells, thereby addressing critical challenges in the industrial application of microalgae.

Article Abstract

Background: Microalgae have shown clear advantages for the production of biofuels compared with energy crops. Apart from their high growth rates and substantial lipid/triacylglycerol yields, microalgae can grow in wastewaters (animal, municipal and mining wastewaters) efficiently removing their primary nutrients (C, N, and P), heavy metals and micropollutants, and they do not compete with crops for arable lands. However, fundamental barriers to the industrial application of microalgae for biofuel production still include high costs of removing the algae from the water and the water from the algae which can account for up to 30-40% of the total cost of biodiesel production. Algal biofilms are becoming increasingly popular as a strategy for the concentration of microalgae, making harvesting/dewatering easier and cheaper.

Results: We have isolated and characterized a number of natural microalgal biofilms from freshwater, saline lakes and marine habitats. Structurally, these biofilms represent complex consortia of unicellular and multicellular, photosynthetic and heterotrophic inhabitants, such as cyanobacteria, microalgae, diatoms, bacteria, and fungi. Biofilm #52 was used as feedstock for bioenergy production. Dark fermentation of its biomass by DT-1 led to the production of 2.4 mol of H/mol of reduced sugar. The levels and compositions of saturated, monosaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids in Biofilm #52 were target-wise modified through the promotion of the growth of selected individual photosynthetic inhabitants. Photosynthetic components isolated from different biofilms were used for tailoring of novel biofilms designed for (i) treatment of specific types of wastewaters, such as reverse osmosis concentrate, (ii) compositions of total fatty acids with a new degree of unsaturation and (iii) bio-flocculation and concentration of commercial microalgal cells. Treatment of different types of wastewaters with biofilms showed a reduction in the concentrations of key nutrients, such as phosphates, ammonia, nitrates, selenium and heavy metals.

Conclusions: This multidisciplinary study showed the new potential of natural biofilms, their individual photosynthetic inhabitants and assembled new algal/cyanobacterial biofilms as the next generation of bioenergy feedstocks which can grow using wastewaters as a cheap source of key nutrients.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5424312PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13068-017-0798-9DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

biofilms
9
microalgal biofilms
8
bioenergy production
8
grow wastewaters
8
biofilm #52
8
fatty acids
8
individual photosynthetic
8
photosynthetic inhabitants
8
types wastewaters
8
key nutrients
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!