Comparative evaluation of inorganic and organic amendments for their flocculation efficiency of selected microalgae
2014
Rakesh, Suchitra | Saxena, Sudhir | Dhar, Dolly W. | Prasanna, Radha | Saxena, Anil K.
Cost-efficient harvesting of microalgae is a major challenge due to their small size and often low concentration in the culture medium. The flocculation efficacy of different inorganic and organic amendments was evaluated on various microalgae genera—one strain each belonging to Chlamydomonas, Chlorococcum, two of Botryococcus, and of Chlorella. An improvised medium comprising of commercial grade urea, single super phosphate, and muriate of potash was used to grow the microalgae for flocculation experiments. High pH induced increased flocculation efficiency (72–76 %) in selected microalgal strains. Ferric chloride was found to be the most efficient for most of the microalgal strains, while maize starch and rice starch proved superior for Chlorella sp. MCC6 and Botryococcus sp. MCC32. Although the highest flocculation efficiency was obtained with inorganic flocculant, i.e., ferric chloride (87.3 %) with Botryococcus MCC31, this was comparable with rice starch (86.8 %) for Botryococcus MCC32. This study showed that widely available cheaper biopolymers such as rice starch, maize, and potato starch can be promising flocculants due to their better harvesting efficiency (>80 %) and low price, thereby contributing to economical production of biodiesel from algae.
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