Development of a two-stage microalgae dewatering process – A life cycle assessment approach

© 2016 Soomro, Ndikubwimana, Zeng, Lu, Lin and Danquah. Even though microalgal biomass is leading the third generation biofuel research, significant effort is required to establish an economically viable commercial-scale microalgal biofuel production system. Whilst a significant amount of work has b...

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Main Authors: Soomro, Rizwan, Ndikubwimana, T., Zeng, X., Lu, Y., Lin, L., Danquah, Michael
Format: Journal Article
Published: Frontiers Research Foundation 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/48075
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author Soomro, Rizwan
Ndikubwimana, T.
Zeng, X.
Lu, Y.
Lin, L.
Danquah, Michael
author_facet Soomro, Rizwan
Ndikubwimana, T.
Zeng, X.
Lu, Y.
Lin, L.
Danquah, Michael
author_sort Soomro, Rizwan
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2016 Soomro, Ndikubwimana, Zeng, Lu, Lin and Danquah. Even though microalgal biomass is leading the third generation biofuel research, significant effort is required to establish an economically viable commercial-scale microalgal biofuel production system. Whilst a significant amount of work has been reported on large-scale cultivation of microalgae using photo-bioreactors and pond systems, research focus on establishing high performance downstream dewatering operations for large-scale processing under optimal economy is limited. The enormous amount of energy and associated cost required for dewatering large-volume microalgal cultures has been the primary hindrance to the development of the needed biomass quantity for industrial-scale microalgal biofuels production. The extremely dilute nature of large-volume microalgal suspension and the small size of microalgae cells in suspension create a significant processing cost during dewatering and this has raised major concerns towards the economic success of commercial-scale microalgal biofuel production as an alternative to conventional petroleum fuels. This article reports an effective framework to assess the performance of different dewatering technologies as the basis to establish an effective two-stage dewatering system. Bioflocculation coupled with tangential flow filtration (TFF) emerged a promising technique with total energy input of 0.041 kWh, 0.05 kg CO2 emissions and a cost of $ 0.0043 for producing 1 kg of microalgae biomass. A streamlined process for operational analysis of two-stage microalgae dewatering technique, encompassing energy input, carbon dioxide emission, and process cost, is presented.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2016
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-480752017-09-13T14:20:54Z Development of a two-stage microalgae dewatering process – A life cycle assessment approach Soomro, Rizwan Ndikubwimana, T. Zeng, X. Lu, Y. Lin, L. Danquah, Michael © 2016 Soomro, Ndikubwimana, Zeng, Lu, Lin and Danquah. Even though microalgal biomass is leading the third generation biofuel research, significant effort is required to establish an economically viable commercial-scale microalgal biofuel production system. Whilst a significant amount of work has been reported on large-scale cultivation of microalgae using photo-bioreactors and pond systems, research focus on establishing high performance downstream dewatering operations for large-scale processing under optimal economy is limited. The enormous amount of energy and associated cost required for dewatering large-volume microalgal cultures has been the primary hindrance to the development of the needed biomass quantity for industrial-scale microalgal biofuels production. The extremely dilute nature of large-volume microalgal suspension and the small size of microalgae cells in suspension create a significant processing cost during dewatering and this has raised major concerns towards the economic success of commercial-scale microalgal biofuel production as an alternative to conventional petroleum fuels. This article reports an effective framework to assess the performance of different dewatering technologies as the basis to establish an effective two-stage dewatering system. Bioflocculation coupled with tangential flow filtration (TFF) emerged a promising technique with total energy input of 0.041 kWh, 0.05 kg CO2 emissions and a cost of $ 0.0043 for producing 1 kg of microalgae biomass. A streamlined process for operational analysis of two-stage microalgae dewatering technique, encompassing energy input, carbon dioxide emission, and process cost, is presented. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/48075 10.3389/fpls.2016.00113 Frontiers Research Foundation unknown
spellingShingle Soomro, Rizwan
Ndikubwimana, T.
Zeng, X.
Lu, Y.
Lin, L.
Danquah, Michael
Development of a two-stage microalgae dewatering process – A life cycle assessment approach
title Development of a two-stage microalgae dewatering process – A life cycle assessment approach
title_full Development of a two-stage microalgae dewatering process – A life cycle assessment approach
title_fullStr Development of a two-stage microalgae dewatering process – A life cycle assessment approach
title_full_unstemmed Development of a two-stage microalgae dewatering process – A life cycle assessment approach
title_short Development of a two-stage microalgae dewatering process – A life cycle assessment approach
title_sort development of a two-stage microalgae dewatering process – a life cycle assessment approach
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/48075