ORCID Profile
0000-0003-3469-9553
Current Organisation
National Cheng Kung University
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Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 09-2015
DOI: 10.1016/J.BIORTECH.2015.02.075
Abstract: The aim of this study was to select a potential microalgal strain for lipid production and to examine the suitability of anaerobically treated piggery wastewater as a nutrient source for production of lipid-rich biomass with the selected microalga. Biomass and lipid productivity of three microalgal strains (Chlorella sorokiniana CY1, Chlorella vulgaris CY5 and Chlamydomonas sp. JSC-04) were compared by using different media, nitrogen sources, and nitrogen concentrations. The highest lipid content and productivity (62.5 wt%, 162 mg/L/d) were obtained with C. vulgaris with BG-11 with 62 mg N/L. Secondly, C. vulgaris was cultivated in sterilized, diluted (1-20×), anaerobically treated piggery wastewater. Biomass production decreased and lipid content increased, when wastewater was more diluted. The highest lipid content of 54.7 wt% was obtained with 20× dilution, while the highest lipid productivity of 100.7 mg/L/d with 5× dilution. Piggery wastewater is a promising resource for mass production of oleaginous microalgal biomass.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 11-2015
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 07-2015
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 03-2021
DOI: 10.1016/J.CHEMOSPHERE.2021.132717
Abstract: Hydrogen as a clean energy that is conducive to energy and environmental sustainability, playing a significant role in the alleviation of global climate change and energy crisis. Biohydrogen generation from microalgae has been reported as a highly attractive approach that can produce a benign clean energy carrier to achieve carbon neutrality and bioenergy sustainability. Thus, this review explored the mechanism of biohydrogen production from microalgae containing direct biophotolysis, indirect biophotolysis, photo fermentation, and dark fermentation. In general, dark fermentation of microalgae for biohydrogen production is relatively better than photo fermentation, biophotolysis, and microbial electrolysis, because it is able to consecutively generate hydrogen and is not reliant on energy supplied by natural sunlight. Besides, this review summarized potential algal strains for hydrogen production focusing on green microalgae and cyanobacteria. Moreover, a thorough review process was conducted to present hydrogen-producing enzymes targeting biosynthesis and localization of enzymes in microalgae. Notably, the most powerful hydrogen-producing enzymes are [Fe-Fe]-hydrogenases, which have an activity nearly 10-100 times better than [Ni-Fe]-hydrogenases and 1000 times better than nitrogenases. In addition, this work highlighted the major factors affecting low energy conversion efficiency and oxygen sensitivity of hydrogen-producing enzymes. Noting that the most practical pathway of biohydrogen generation was sulfur-deprivation compared with phosphorus, nitrogen, and magnesium deficiency. Further discussions in this work summarized the recent advancement in biohydrogen production from microalgae such as genetic engineering, microalgae-bacteria consortium, electro-bio-hydrogenation, and nanomaterials for developing enzyme stability and hydrolytic efficiency. More importantly, this review provided a summary of current limitations and future perspectives on the sustainable production of biohydrogen from microalgae.
No related grants have been discovered for Jo-Shu Chang.