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Chlorella vulgaris cultivation in pilot-scale to treat real swine wastewater and mitigate carbon dioxide for sustainable biodiesel production by direct enzymatic transesterification

69

Citations

35

References

2022

Year

Abstract

This study firstly addressed real swine wastewater (RSW) treatment by an indigenous Chlorella vulgaris MBFJNU-1 in 5-m<sup>3</sup> outdoor open raceway ponds and then direct enzymatic transesterification of the resulting lipids from the wet biomass for sustainable biodiesel production. Compared to the control group, C. vulgaris MBFJNU-1 at 3% CO<sub>2</sub> achieved higher microalgal biomass (478.5 mg/L) and total fatty acids content (21.3%), higher CO<sub>2</sub> bio-fixation (63.2 mg/L/d) and lipid (9.1 mg/L/d) productivities, and greater nutrients removals (total nitrogen, 82.1%; total phosphorus, 28.4%; chemical oxygen demand, 37.1%). The highest biodiesel conversion (93.3%) was attained by enzymatic transesterification of wet disrupted Chlorella biomass with 5% lipase TL and 5% phospholipase PLA. Moreover, the enzymatic transesterification gave around 83% biodiesel conversion in a 15-L stirred tank bioreactor. Furthermore, the integrated process was a cost-effective approach to treat RSW and mitigate CO<sub>2</sub> for microalgal biodiesel production, based on the mass and energy balances analysis.

References

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