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Biopolymers production from microalgae and cyanobacteria cultivated in wastewater: Recent advances

Biotechnology Advances 2022 101 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sameh S. Ali Savvas Giannis Mastropetros, Sameh S. Ali Sameh S. Ali Sameh S. Ali Sameh S. Ali Konstantinos Pispas, Sameh S. Ali Sameh S. Ali Sameh S. Ali Dimitris Zagklis, Sameh S. Ali Konstantinos Pispas, Sameh S. Ali Sameh S. Ali Michael Kornaros, Michael Kornaros, Michael Kornaros, Michael Kornaros, Sameh S. Ali Sameh S. Ali Sameh S. Ali Michael Kornaros, Sameh S. Ali

Summary

This review explores how microalgae and cyanobacteria grown in wastewater can produce biodegradable biopolymers as an alternative to conventional plastics. Researchers found that these organisms can manufacture polyhydroxyalkanoates and other bioplastics while simultaneously helping to treat wastewater. The approach offers a promising dual benefit of reducing plastic pollution and creating value from waste streams.

Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Plastic materials are used to manufacture a broad variety of items with a short useful lifespan, resulting in significant amounts of waste material generation. This form of waste is often observed floating at sea, and different microplastics have been discovered in fish stomachs and women's placentas. Bioplastics are a more biodegradable substitute for fossil-based polymers. Microalgae are capable of producing poly (hydroxy alkanoate) esters (PHAs), aliphatic polyesters that are biodegradable. The most prevalent and well-characterized biopolymer is the poly (3-hydroxy butyrate) ester (PHB), which belongs to the short-chain PHAs. Under aerobic conditions, PHB compounds degrade fully to carbon dioxide and water. They are ecologically neutral, having thermal and mechanical qualities comparable to those of petrochemical polymers. Numerous microalgae species have been reported in the literature to be capable of making bioplastics under certain conditions (N-P restriction, light exposure, etc.), which may be exploited as a source of energy and carbon. To further ameliorate the environmental impact of microalgae culture for bioplastics production, a limited number of published studies have examined the accumulation of bioplastics, from microalgae grown in wastewater, at a concentration of 5.5-65% of dry biomass weight.

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