Isolation, characterization, and validation of oleaginous, multi-trophic, and haloalkaline-tolerant microalgae for two-stage cultivation

42Citations
Citations of this article
129Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Mass outdoor cultivation of microalgae for biofuels and co-products faces challenges of low lipid productivity, contamination, inefficient CO2 supply, and difficulties in harvesting. A two-stage cultivation process was developed to address these challenges. This involves culturing microalgae in a fermentor heterotrophically or photobioreactor mixotrophically as first-stage to rapidly obtain high cell densities for inoculating a phototrophic open-pond culture featuring high levels of NaHCO3, pH, and salinity as second-stage. A microalgae that is tolerant of these phototrophic conditions, can use organic carbon, and can prolifically produce oil is key to the success of such a two-stage process. Two oleaginous, haloalkaline-tolerant, and multi-trophic green microalgae from soda lakes were isolated, identified, and compared in this study using a multi-instrument approach as candidates for such process. A model triacylglyceride (TAG) was developed for rapid, non-destructive lipid quantitation using liquid-state 1H NMR. A two-stage cultivation system and a high pH-mediated auto-flocculation method were tested on the selected strain ALP2 with a 1L fermentor and 40L open-tank. In unoptimized conditions, the stain achieved a final biomass concentration of 0.978gDCW/L, lipid content of 39.78% DCW, and auto-flocculation harvesting efficiency of 64.1%. © 2014 Elsevier B.V.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Wensel, P., Helms, G., Hiscox, B., Davis, W. C., Kirchhoff, H., Bule, M., … Chen, S. (2014). Isolation, characterization, and validation of oleaginous, multi-trophic, and haloalkaline-tolerant microalgae for two-stage cultivation. Algal Research, 4(1), 2–11. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.algal.2013.12.005

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free