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      Optimising the lipid production of the green alga Neochloris oleoabundans using box-behnken experimental design

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      The Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering
      Wiley

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          Biodiesel from microalgae beats bioethanol.

          Renewable biofuels are needed to displace petroleum-derived transport fuels, which contribute to global warming and are of limited availability. Biodiesel and bioethanol are the two potential renewable fuels that have attracted the most attention. As demonstrated here, biodiesel and bioethanol produced from agricultural crops using existing methods cannot sustainably replace fossil-based transport fuels, but there is an alternative. Biodiesel from microalgae seems to be the only renewable biofuel that has the potential to completely displace petroleum-derived transport fuels without adversely affecting supply of food and other crop products. Most productive oil crops, such as oil palm, do not come close to microalgae in being able to sustainably provide the necessary amounts of biodiesel. Similarly, bioethanol from sugarcane is no match for microalgal biodiesel.
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            Lipid productivity as a key characteristic for choosing algal species for biodiesel production

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              Effects of nitrogen sources on cell growth and lipid accumulation of green alga Neochloris oleoabundans.

              Microalgal lipids are the oils of future for sustainable biodiesel production. However, relatively high production costs due to low lipid productivity have been one of the major obstacles impeding their commercial production. We studied the effects of nitrogen sources and their concentrations on cell growth and lipid accumulation of Neochloris oleoabundans, one of the most promising oil-rich microalgal species. While the highest lipid cell content of 0.40 g/g was obtained at the lowest sodium nitrate concentration (3 mM), a remarkable lipid productivity of 0.133 g l(-1) day(-1) was achieved at 5 mM with a lipid cell content of 0.34 g/g and a biomass productivity of 0.40 g l(-1) day(-1). The highest biomass productivity was obtained at 10 mM sodium nitrate, with a biomass concentration of 3.2 g/l and a biomass productivity of 0.63 g l(-1) day(-1). It was observed that cell growth continued after the exhaustion of external nitrogen pool, hypothetically supported by the consumption of intracellular nitrogen pools such as chlorophyll molecules. The relationship among nitrate depletion, cell growth, lipid cell content, and cell chlorophyll content are discussed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering
                Can. J. Chem. Eng.
                Wiley
                00084034
                August 2011
                August 2011
                March 17 2011
                : 89
                : 4
                : 932-939
                Article
                10.1002/cjce.20513
                f3958d3b-3505-438b-8f67-005a514646de
                © 2011

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1

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