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Carbon Dioxide Fixation by Algal Cultivation Using Wastewater Nutrients
299
Citations
5
References
1997
Year
Carbon SequestrationChemical EngineeringChlorella VulgarisEngineeringAlgal BiomassAlgal BiotechnologyEnvironmental EngineeringAlgal CultivationBioremediationBiological Waste TreatmentWater TreatmentEnvironmental MicrobiologySteel-making PlantCarbon Dioxide FixationWaste ManagementWastewater TreatmentCo2 Fixation
Chlorella vulgaris was cultivated in wastewater discharged from a steel-making plant with the aim of developing an economically feasible system to remove ammonia from wastewater and CO2 from flue gas simultaneously. Since no phosphorus compounds existed in wastewater, external phosphate (15·3–46·0 g m−3) was added to the wastewater. After adaptation to 5% (v/v) CO2, the growth of C. vulgaris was significantly improved at a typical concentration of CO2 in flue gas of 15% (v/v). Growth of C. vulgaris in raw wastewater was better than that in wastewater buffered with HEPES at 15% (v/v) CO2. CO2 fixation and ammonia removal rates were estimated as 26·0 g CO2 m−3 h−1 and 0·92 g NH3 m−3 h−1, respectively, when the alga was cultivated in wastewater supplemented with 46·0 g PO43 m−3 without pH control at 15% (v/v) CO2. © 1997 SCI.
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