Publication | Closed Access
A Simple, Cost-Efficient Method to Separate Microalgal Lipids from Wet Biomass Using Surface Energy-Modified Membranes
22
Citations
36
References
2015
Year
EngineeringAlgal BiotechnologyMembrane CharacterizationChemical EngineeringAlgal BiomassSeparate Microalgal LipidsBiochemical EngineeringConformal CoatingWater TreatmentMembrane ProcessMembrane TechnologyAlgal HarvestingAquatic BiofuelsCost-efficient MethodMembrane BiologyNovel MembranePolymer MembraneBiomanufacturingChemical Enhanced Oil RecoveryMembrane FormationAlgal CultivationEnvironmental EngineeringWater PurificationAlgal ProductFood EngineeringMedicineMembrane Surface
For the efficient separation of lipid extracted from microalgae cells, a novel membrane was devised by introducing a functional polymer coating onto a membrane surface by means of an initiated chemical vapor deposition (iCVD) process. To this end, a steel-use-stainless (SUS) membrane was modified in a way that its surface energy was systemically modified. The surface modification by conformal coating of functional polymer film allowed for selective separation of oil-water mixture, by harnessing the tuned interfacial energy between each liquid phase and the membrane surface. The surface-modified membrane, when used with chloroform-based solvent, exhibited superb permeate flux, breakthrough pressure, and also separation yield: it allowed separation of 95.5 ± 1.2% of converted lipid (FAME) in the chloroform phase from the water/MeOH phase with microalgal debris. This result clearly supported that the membrane-based lipid separation is indeed facilitated by way of membrane being functionalized, enabling us to simplify the whole downstream process of microalgae-derived biodiesel production.
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