Effect of urban wastewater ratio in the influent of a membrane photobioreactor for microalgae cultivation and nutrient removal
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Díaz, Verónica; Maza Márquez, Paula; Antiñolo Bermúdez, Laura; Poyatos Capilla, José Manuel; Martín Pascual, Jaime; Muñio Martínez, María Del MarEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
membrane photobioreactor microalgae consortium
Fecha
2024-03-20Referencia bibliográfica
V. Díaz et al. 12 (2024) 112527. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jece.2024.112527]
Patrocinador
project TED2021–130500B-I00, financed by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033; European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR.Resumen
Microalgae are increasingly attracting attention for the wastewater regeneration, removing nutrients, and
obtaining a high-value product. These nutrients are essential for the growth of algae and aquatic plants, but an
overabundance of them in aquatic ecosystems can cause eutrophication, so it is very important to control the
concentration of these nutrients in wastewater discharges to the environment. In this study, we have carried out
the adaptation of microalgae by gradually changing the influent from a culture medium to treated urban
wastewater in membrane photobioreactors, analysing the consortium of microalgae and bacteria present and
evaluating the removal of nutrients such us nitrogen and phosphorus. A satisfactory adaptation was observed,
reaching concentrations of 0.164 g/L at the end of the study. In the case of the chlorophyte communities studied,
it was found that the predominant species was the same in all adaptation phases (unclassified environmental
Eukaryota), as well as in the photobioreactors that worked in parallel under extreme conditions. Regarding nitrogen
and phosphorus removal during the adaptation phases, the values increased in both cases, reaching
96.99% and 48.10%, respectively. Following the microbiological study, bacterial families have been detected
that show symbiotic activity during the growth of microalgae. Multidimensional scaling revealed positive correlations
between the detected microalgae and nitrogen removal in the membrane photobioreactor. Our data
suggest that MPBRs are a potential tertiary treatment that can produce microalgae biomass from real treated
wastewater by utilising its nitrogen and phosphorus content, resulting in a higher quality effluent that is less
harmful to the environment.





