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Coupling wastewater treatment, biomass, lipids, and biodiesel production of some green microalgae

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2023 49 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Mostafa M. El‐Sheekh Mostafa M. El‐Sheekh Hamdy R. Galal, Mostafa M. El‐Sheekh Hamdy R. Galal, Mostafa M. El‐Sheekh Amal SH. H. Mousa, Amal SH. H. Mousa, Abla A. M. Farghl, Abla A. M. Farghl, Mostafa M. El‐Sheekh

Summary

Researchers demonstrated that green microalgae species can simultaneously treat wastewater by removing nutrients and heavy metals while producing lipid-rich biomass suitable for biodiesel production, offering a dual-purpose environmental solution.

Study Type Environmental

This study demonstrates the combination of wastewater treatment and green microalgae cultivation for the low-cost production of lipids as a feedstock for biodiesel production. Three green microalgal species were used: Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, Monoraphidium braunii, and Scenedesmus obliquus. Nutrient, heavy metals and minerals removal, biomass productivity, carbohydrate, protein, proline, lipid, and fatty acids methyl ester (FAMEs) contents besides biodiesel properties were evaluated. The results showed that all algal species were highly efficient and had the potential to reduce nitrate, ammonia, phosphate, sulfate, heavy metals (Zn<sup>2+</sup>, Cu<sup>2+</sup>, Mn<sup>2+</sup>, and Fe<sup>2+</sup>), calcium, magnesium, sodium, and potassium after 10 days of algal treatment compared to initial concentrations. The removal efficiency of these parameters ranged from 12 to 100%. The growth rates of M. braunii and S. obliquus cultivated in wastewater were significantly decreased compared to the control (synthetic medium). In contrast, C. reinhardtii showed the highest growth rate when cultivated in sewage water. Wastewater could decrease the soluble carbohydrates and protein content in all tested algae and increase the proline content in M. braunii and S. obliquus. In wastewater culture, M. braunii had the highest lipid productivity of 5.26 mg L<sup>-1</sup> day<sup>-1</sup>. The fatty acid profiles of two studied species (C. reinhardtii and M. braunii) revealed their suitability as a feedstock for biodiesel production due to their high content of saturated fatty acids, representing 80.91% and 68.62% of the total fatty acid content, respectively, when cultivated in wastewater. This study indicated that wastewater could be used to modify biomass productivity, lipid productivity, and the quantity of individual fatty acids in some algae that affect biodiesel quality to achieve international biodiesel standards.

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