Advanced wastewater treatment using microalgae: Effect of temperature on removal of nutrients and organic carbon
Author | Mohamad, Shurair |
Author | Fares, Almomani |
Author | Judd, Simon |
Author | Bhosale, Rahul |
Author | Kumar, Anand |
Author | Gosh, Ujjal |
Author | Khreisheh, Majeda |
Available date | 2020-08-27T10:08:53Z |
Publication Date | 2017 |
Publication Name | IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science |
Resource | Scopus |
ISSN | 17551307 |
Abstract | This study evaluated the use of mixed indigenous microalgae (MIMA) as a treatment process for wastewaters and CO2 capturing technology at different temperatures. The study follows the growth rate of MIMA, CO2 Capturing from flue gas, removals of organic matter and nutrients from three types of wastewater (primary effluent, secondary effluent and septic effluent). A noticeable difference between the growth patterns of MIMA was observed at different CO2 and different operational temperatures. MIMA showed the highest growth grate when injected with CO2 dosage of 10% compared to the growth for the systems injected with 5% and 15 % of CO2. Ammonia and phosphorus removals for Spirulina were 69%, 75%, and 83%, and 20%, 45% and 75 % for the media injected with 0, 5 and 10% CO2. The results of this study show that simple and cost-effective microalgae-based wastewater treatment systems can be successfully employed at different temperatures as a successful CO2 capturing technology even with the small probability of inhibition at high temperatures. |
Sponsor | This publication was made possible by the NPRP grant (NPRP No.: 6 - 1436 - 2 - 581) from the Qatar National Research Fund (a member of Qatar Foundation). |
Language | en |
Publisher | Institute of Physics Publishing |
Subject | wastewater treatmen microalgae nutrients organic carbon |
Type | Conference Paper |
Issue Number | 1 |
Volume Number | 67 |
Files in this item
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
-
Chemical Engineering [1174 items ]
-
GPC Research [499 items ]