Photosynthesis Monitoring in Microalgae Cultures Grown on Municipal Wastewater as a Nutrient Source in Large-Scale Outdoor Bioreactors

Microalgae cultures were used for a WW treatment to remediate nutrients while producing biomass and recycling water. In these trials, raceway ponds (RWPs; 1 and 0.5 ha) were located next to a municipal (WW) treatment plant in Mérida, Spain. The ponds were used for continuous, all-year-round microalg...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Masojídek, Jiri, Gómez Serrano, Cintia, Ranglová, Karolína, Cicchi, Bernardo, Encinas Bogeat, Ángel, Câmara Manoel, João A., Sánchez Zurano, Ana, Silva Benavides, Ana Margarita, Barceló Villalobos, Marta, Robles Carnero, Victor A., Ördög, Vince, Gómez Pinchetti, Juan Luis, Vörös, Lajos, Arbib, Zouhayr, Rogalla, Frank, Torzillo, Giuseppe, López Figueroa, Félix, Acién Fernández, Francisco Gabriel
Format: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2022
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10835/14021
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Summary:Microalgae cultures were used for a WW treatment to remediate nutrients while producing biomass and recycling water. In these trials, raceway ponds (RWPs; 1 and 0.5 ha) were located next to a municipal (WW) treatment plant in Mérida, Spain. The ponds were used for continuous, all-year-round microalgae production using WW as a source of nutrients. Neither CO2 nor air was supplied to cultures. The objective was to validate photosynthesis monitoring techniques in large-scale bioreactors. Various in-situ/ex-situ methods based on chlorophyll fluorescence and oxygen evolution measurements were used to follow culture performance. Photosynthesis variables gathered with these techniques were compared to the physiological behavior and growth of cultures. Good photosynthetic activity was indicated by the build-up of dissolved oxygen concentration up to 380% saturation, high photochemical yield (Fv/Fm = 0.62–0.71), and relative electron transport rate rETR between 200 and 450 μmol e− m−2 s−1 at midday, which resulted in biomass productivity of about 15–25 g DW m−2 day−1. The variables represent reliable markers reflecting the physiological status of microalgae cultures. Using waste nutrients, the biomass production cost can be significantly decreased for abundant biomass production in large-scale bioreactors, which can be exploited for agricultural purposes.