Florida Solar Energy Centre, University of Central Florida, 1679 Clearlake Road, 32922 Cocoa, FL USA.
School of Applied Sciences, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University, 3083 Bundoora, Melbourne, VIC Australia.
Biotechnol Biofuels. 2015 Feb 15;8:24. doi: 10.1186/s13068-015-0210-6. eCollection 2015.
The microalgal-based industries are facing a number of important challenges that in turn affect their economic viability. Arguably the most important of these are associated with the high costs of harvesting and dewatering of the microalgal cells, the costs and sustainability of nutrient supplies and costly methods for large scale oil extraction. Existing harvesting technologies, which can account for up to 50% of the total cost, are not economically feasible because of either requiring too much energy or the addition of chemicals. Fungal-assisted flocculation is currently receiving increased attention because of its high harvesting efficiency. Moreover, some of fungal and microalgal strains are well known for their ability to treat wastewater, generating biomass which represents a renewable and sustainable feedstock for bioenergy production.
We screened 33 fungal strains, isolated from compost, straws and soil for their lipid content and flocculation efficiencies against representatives of microalgae commercially used for biodiesel production, namely the heterotrophic freshwater microalgae Chlorella protothecoides and the marine microalgae Tetraselmis suecica. Lipid levels and composition were analyzed in fungal-algal pellets grown on media containing alternative carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus sources from wheat straw and swine wastewater, respectively. The biomass of fungal-algal pellets grown on swine wastewater was used as feedstock for the production of value-added chemicals, biogas, bio-solids and liquid petrochemicals through pyrolysis. Co-cultivation of microalgae and filamentous fungus increased total biomass production, lipid yield and wastewater bioremediation efficiency.
Fungal-assisted microalgal flocculation shows significant potential for solving the major challenges facing the commercialization of microalgal biotechnology, namely (i) the efficient and cost-effective harvesting of freshwater and seawater algal strains; (ii) enhancement of total oil production and optimization of its composition; (iii) nutrient supply through recovering of the primary nutrients, nitrogen and phosphates and microelements from wastewater. The biomass generated was thermochemically converted into biogas, bio-solids and a range of liquid petrochemicals including straight-chain C12 to C21 alkanes which can be directly used as a glycerine-free component of biodiesel. Pyrolysis represents an efficient alternative strategy for biofuel production from species with tough cell walls such as fungi and fungal-algal pellets.
基于微藻的产业面临着许多重要的挑战,这些挑战反过来又影响了它们的经济可行性。可以说,其中最重要的是与微藻细胞的高收获和脱水成本、养分供应的成本和可持续性以及昂贵的大规模采油方法有关。现有的收获技术由于需要太多的能量或添加化学物质,因此在经济上不可行,这些技术可能占总成本的 50%。真菌辅助絮凝由于其高收获效率而受到越来越多的关注。此外,一些真菌和微藻菌株以处理废水的能力而闻名,它们产生的生物质代表了生物能源生产的可再生和可持续原料。
我们筛选了 33 株真菌菌株,这些菌株分别从堆肥、秸秆和土壤中分离出来,用于对用于生物柴油生产的代表性微藻(即异养淡水微藻绿球藻和海洋微藻三角褐指藻)进行脂质含量和絮凝效率的检测。在含有来自小麦秸秆和猪废水的替代碳、氮和磷源的培养基上生长的真菌-藻类颗粒的脂质水平和组成进行了分析。在猪废水中生长的真菌-藻类颗粒的生物质被用作通过热解生产增值化学品、沼气、生物固体和液体石油化学品的原料。微藻和丝状真菌的共培养增加了总生物量的生产、脂质产量和废水生物修复效率。
真菌辅助微藻絮凝显示出解决微藻生物技术商业化面临的主要挑战的巨大潜力,这些挑战包括:(i)高效、经济地收获淡水和海水藻类菌株;(ii)通过从废水中回收主要营养物氮和磷以及微量元素来增强总产油量并优化其组成;(iii)通过回收主要营养物氮和磷以及微量元素来提供养分。生成的生物质通过热化学转化为沼气、生物固体和一系列液体石油化学品,包括直链 C12 至 C21 烷烃,这些烷烃可直接用作无甘油的生物柴油成分。热解是一种从真菌和真菌-藻类颗粒等具有坚韧细胞壁的物种生产生物燃料的有效替代策略。