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Cited 64 time in webofscience Cited 80 time in scopus
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Production and harvesting of microalgae and an efficient operational approach to biofuel production for a sustainable environmentopen access

Authors
Khan, ShamshadNaushad, M.Iqbal, JibranBathula, ChinnaSharma, Gaurav
Issue Date
Mar-2022
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd.
Keywords
Algae production; Biofuel; Wastewater treatment; Microalgae; Algae-flocculation
Citation
Fuel, v.311, pp 1 - 19
Pages
19
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Fuel
Volume
311
Start Page
1
End Page
19
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/3435
DOI
10.1016/j.fuel.2021.122543
ISSN
0016-2361
1873-7153
Abstract
Biofuel derived from microalgae has developed as an environmentally benign alternative to conventional fossil fuels. Mass production of this biofuel remains difficult due to several of technological and economic issues ranging from commercial production and harvesting of microalgae to biofuel production. The major impediments to establishing an integrated system are large-scale microalgal production and harvesting in a manner that allows for downstream processing to produce biofuels and other useful bioproducts. We integrated and evaluated suspended cultures in open ponds and closed reactors for algal production systems, emphasizing the advantages of attached cultures for algal production. The challenge of harvesting microalgae in liquid growing media has been addressed by technical improvements that have incorporated chemical, mechanical, biological and thermal approaches for dewatering microalgal suspensions and extracting additional bioproducts. Nonbiological approaches such as centrifugation, electrocoagulation, chemical, electrical, and magnetic nanoparticle flocculation, filtering, and biological coculture-based methods were evaluated for their feasibility and considerations in establishing microalgae harvesting systems. The latest breakthroughs in bacteria and fungi-based coculture algae-flocculation technology are discussed. Additionally, this review considers the opportunities for genetic engineering innovation and resources for increasing microalgae production and harvesting, as well as for developing new bioproducts in a sustainable and cost-effective manner.
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Devasahayam, Bathula Chinna
College of Engineering (Department of Electronics and Electrical Engineering)
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