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      The regulating mechanisms of CO2 fixation and carbon allocations of two Chlorella sp. strains in response to high CO2 levels

      , , , , , ,
      Chemosphere
      Elsevier BV

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          CO(2) bio-mitigation using microalgae.

          Microalgae are a group of unicellular or simple multicellular photosynthetic microorganisms that can fix CO(2) efficiently from different sources, including the atmosphere, industrial exhaust gases, and soluble carbonate salts. Combination of CO(2) fixation, biofuel production, and wastewater treatment may provide a very promising alternative to current CO(2) mitigation strategies.
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            CO2 biofixation and fatty acid composition of Scenedesmus obliquus and Chlorella pyrenoidosa in response to different CO2 levels.

            In this study, Scenedesmus obliquus SJTU-3 and Chlorella pyrenoidosa SJTU-2 were cultivated with 0.03%, 5%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 50% CO(2). The two microalgae could grow at 50% CO(2) (>0.69 g L(-1)) and grew well (>1.22 g L(-1)) under CO(2) concentrations ranging from 5% to 20%. Both of the two examined microalgae showed best growth potential at 10% CO(2). The maximum biomass concentration and CO(2) biofixation rate were 1.84 g L(-1) and 0.288 g L(-1) d(-1) for S. obliquus SJTU-3 and 1.55 g L(-1) and 0.260 g L(-1) d(-1) for C. pyrenoidosa SJTU-2, respectively. The main fatty acid compositions of the two examined microalgae were fatty acids with C(16)-C(18) (>94%) under different CO(2) levels. High CO(2) levels (30-50%) were favorable for the accumulation of total lipids and polyunsaturated fatty acids. The present results suggested that the two microalgae be appropriate for mitigating CO(2) in the flue gases and biodiesel production.
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              Reduction of CO2 by a high-density culture of Chlorella sp. in a semicontinuous photobioreactor.

              The microalga incorporated photobioreactor is a highly efficient biological system for converting CO2 into biomass. Using microalgal photobioreactor as CO2 mitigation system is a practical approach for elimination of waste gas from the CO2 emission. In this study, the marine microalga Chlorella sp. was cultured in a photobioreactor to assess biomass, lipid productivity and CO2 reduction. We also determined the effects of cell density and CO2 concentration on the growth of Chlorella sp. During an 8-day interval cultures in the semicontinuous cultivation, the specific growth rate and biomass of Chlorella sp. cultures in the conditions aerated 2-15% CO2 were 0.58-0.66 d(-1) and 0.76-0.87 gL(-1), respectively. At CO2 concentrations of 2%, 5%, 10% and 15%, the rate of CO2 reduction was 0.261, 0.316, 0.466 and 0.573 gh(-1), and efficiency of CO2 removal was 58%, 27%, 20% and 16%, respectively. The efficiency of CO2 removal was similar in the single photobioreactor and in the six-parallel photobioreactor. However, CO2 reduction, production of biomass, and production of lipid were six times greater in the six-parallel photobioreactor than those in the single photobioreactor. In conclusion, inhibition of microalgal growth cultured in the system with high CO2 (10-15%) aeration could be overcome via a high-density culture of microalgal inoculum that was adapted to 2% CO2. Moreover, biological reduction of CO2 in the established system could be parallely increased using the photobioreactor consisting of multiple units.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Chemosphere
                Chemosphere
                Elsevier BV
                00456535
                May 2020
                May 2020
                : 247
                : 125814
                Article
                10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.125814
                9052c3b0-eed2-4f7e-b57c-e281abf8ef9f
                © 2020

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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