Abstract
Focusing on CO2 fixation and a-linolenic acid (ALA) production, photoautotrophic cultivation of the hot-spring alga Cyanidium caldarium was investigated using Allen’s medium under a 5 % CO2-enriched atmosphere. Although the growth rate was maximum at ca. 40°C, the optimum cultivation conditions (temperature, H+ concentration in the medium and light intensity) for ALA production were found to be 30°C, pH 2.0-4.0 and ca. 10,000 lux respectively. Simulation of a chemostat cultivation at these optimum conditions showed that the rates of CO2 fixation and of ALA production could reach 0.75 kg-CO2/(kg-cells-d) and 5.44 g-ALA/(kg-cells.d), respectively, in the exponential phase. This rate of CO2 fixation corresponded to 0.030 kg-CO2/(m3-h) at a cell concentration of 0.96 kg/m3. This activity of C. caldarium for CO2 fixation was comparable to that of blue-green algae and was 10 to 100 times greater than that of green plants. Thus, C. caldarium was shown to be useful for the fixation of CO2. © 1994, The Society of Chemical Engineers, Japan. All rights reserved.
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Akimoto, M., Ohara, T., Ohtaguchi, K., & Koide, K. (1994). Carbon dioxide fixation and α -Linolenic acid production by the hot-spring alga cyanidium caldarium. JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING OF JAPAN, 27(3), 329–333. https://doi.org/10.1252/jcej.27.329
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