2 research outputs found
Harvesting of the marine microalga conticribra weissflogii (bacillariophyceae) by cationic polymeric flocculants
The harvesting of microalgae is currently one of the bottlenecks hindering the commercial
production of microalgae-based biofuels and products. The objective of this study was to
determine the best flocculant and its optimum concentration in order to harvest the marine
microalga Conticribra weissflogii (previously Thalassiosira weissflogii) for further use in
the production of biofuels or bioelements. Experiments were conducted with cultures in
the logarithmic and stationary growth phases. The low-charge FLOPAM® FO 4240 SH was
the most effective at concentrations of 2 and 4 mg m 3 in the LOG phase cultures, with
flocculation efficiencies >90%. Smaller flocculation efficiencies were observed for cells in
the stationary growth phase, most likely due to the production of dissolved organic carbon
by the microalga. The highest microalgae density generated higher flocculation rates,
whereas the pH and salinity negatively impacted flocculant efficiency