Abstract

BackgroundMicroalgae are highly efficient cellular factories that capture CO2 and are also alternative feedstock for biofuel production. Carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids are major biochemical components in microalgae. Carbohydrates or starch in microalgae are possible substrates in yeast fermentation for biofuel production. The carbon partitioning in microalgae could be regulated through environmental stresses, such as high concentration of CO2, high light intensity, and nitrogen starvation conditions. It is essential to obtain carbohydrate-rich microalgae via an optimal bioprocess strategy.ResultsThe carbohydrate accumulation in a CO2 tolerance strain, Chlorella sp. AE10, was investigated with a two-stage process. The CO2 concentration, light intensity, and initial nitrogen concentration were changed drastically in both stages. During the first stage, it was cultivated over 3 days under 1% CO2, a photon flux of 100 μmol m−2 s−1, and 1.5 g L−1 NaNO3. It was cultivated under 10% CO2, 1000 μmol m−2 s−1, and 0.375 g L−1 NaNO3 during the second stage. In addition, two operation modes were compared. At the beginning of the second stage of mode 2, cells were diluted to 0.1 g L−1 and there was no cell dilution in mode 1. The total carbohydrate productivity of mode 2 was increased about 42% compared with that of mode 1. The highest total carbohydrate content and the highest starch content of mode 2 were 77.6% (DW) and 60.3% (DW) at day 5, respectively. The starch productivity was 0.311 g L−1 day−1 and the total carbohydrate productivity was 0.421 g L−1 day−1 in 6 days.ConclusionsIn this study, a novel two-stage process was proposed for improving carbohydrate and starch accumulation in Chlorella sp. AE10. Despite cell dilution at the beginning of the second stage, environmental stress conditions of high concentration of CO2, high light intensity, and limited nitrogen concentration at the second stage were critical for carbohydrate and starch accumulation. Although the cells were diluted, the growths were not inhibited and the carbohydrate productivity was improved. These results were helpful to establish an integrated approach from CO2 capture to biofuel production by microalgae.

Highlights

  • Microalgae are highly efficient cellular factories that capture CO2 and are alternative feedstock for biofuel production

  • The aim of the current study is to propose an optimal bioprocess strategy for carbohydrate accumulation in microalgae under high light intensity, high concentration of CO2 and nitrogen deficiency conditions

  • The final carbohydrate productivity of each one of the ten PBRs was same to a single PBR, 7.65 g (DW) carbohydrate could be obtained in mode 2 but that was 0.53 g (DW) in mode 1

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Summary

Introduction

Microalgae are highly efficient cellular factories that capture CO2 and are alternative feedstock for biofuel production. Carbohydrates or starch in microalgae are possible substrates in yeast fermentation for biofuel production. The carbon partitioning in microalgae could be regulated through environmental stresses, such as high concentration of CO2, high light intensity, and nitrogen starvation conditions. Carbohydrate-rich microalgae are possible to be feedstock for green chemical conversions. The product was 5-hydroxymethylfurfural for same microalgae strain if the commercial H-ZSM-5 zeolite was applied in one-pot conversion [6]. The carbohydrates in microalgae are possible substrate for bioethanol production by yeast fermentation [7, 8]. It is very important to obtain carbohydrate or starch-rich microalgae as feedstock for the chemical or biochemical conversions [9]

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