Abstract

Attached cultivation systems have been receiving extensive attention as a breakthrough in microalgae cultivation technology. However, there is a lack of studies that emphasize precise optimization of important parameters in attached cultivation of microalgae. In this study, the effects of two major environmental parameters in photoautotrophic cultivation, light intensity and CO2 concentration, on the biomass and lipid surface productivity of Ettlia sp. YC001 were optimized by employing Response Surface Methodology (RSM) and validated experimentally. The optimum initial conditions for attached cultivation were use of seed from the late exponential phase (LE) and an inoculum surface density of 2.5 g/m2. By optimization, maximum biomass surface productivity of 28.0 ± 1.5 g/m2/day was achieved at 730 μE/m2/s with 8% CO2. The maximum lipid surface productivity was 4.2 ± 0.3 g/m2/day at 500 μE/m2/s with 7% CO2. Change of the fatty acid composition with respect to changes in environment parameters led to improvement of biodiesel quality at higher light intensity and higher CO2 concentration. Attached cultivation of Ettlia sp. YC001 has successfully produced biomass and lipids at a high production rate with relatively low light energy demand and high CO2 utilization.

Highlights

  • Attached cultivation systems have been receiving extensive attention as a breakthrough in microalgae cultivation technology

  • Throughout the period, the maximum biomass surface productivity was achieved around day 4 and the seed from late exponential phase (LE) on day 4 showed the highest biomass surface productivity

  • Seed from LE was used for the remaining experiments in attached cultivation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Attached cultivation systems have been receiving extensive attention as a breakthrough in microalgae cultivation technology. The effects of two major environmental parameters in photoautotrophic cultivation, light intensity and CO2 concentration, on the biomass and lipid surface productivity of Ettlia sp. Looking at the entire process, cultivation technology is considered one of the major reasons for this lack of economic competitiveness, where researchers encounter a number of significant obstacles that have not been resolved yet[1] These obstacles facing conventional cultivation technology are fundamentally due to low biomass density (

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call