Effect of LED Illumination Cycle and Carbon Sources on Biofilms of Haematococcus pluvialis in Pilot-Scale Angled Twin-Layer Porous Substrate Photobioreactors

  • Thanh Tri Do
  • , Toan Em Quach-Van
  • , Thanh Cong Nguyen
  • , Pau Loke Show
  • , Tran Minh Ly Nguyen
  • , Duc Hoan Huynh
  • , Dai Long Tran
  • , Michael Melkonian
  • , Hoang Dung Tran

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    3 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    Light-emitting diodes are increasingly used as artificial light sources in Haematococcus pluvialis cultivation due to the fact of their energy advantages. The immobilized cultivation of H. pluvialis in pilot-scale angled twin-layer porous substrate photobioreactors (TL-PSBRs) was initially performed with a 14/10 h light/dark cycle and showed relatively low biomass growth and astaxanthin accumulation. In this study, the illumination time with red and blue LEDs at a light intensity of 120 µmol photons m−2 s−1 was increased to 16–24 h per day. With a light/dark cycle of 22/2 h, the biomass productivity of the algae was 7.5 g m−2 day−1, 2.4 times higher than in the 14/10 h cycle. The percentage of astaxanthin in the dry biomass was 2%, and the total amount of astaxanthin was 1.7 g m−2. Along with the increase in light duration, adding 10 or 20 mM NaHCO3 to the BG11-H culture medium over ten days of cultivation in angled TL-PSBRs did not increase the total amount of astaxanthin compared with only CO2 addition at a flow rate of 3.6 mg min−1 to the culture medium. Adding NaHCO3 with a 30–80 mM concentration inhibited algal growth and astaxanthin accumulation. However, adding 10–40 mM NaHCO3 caused algal cells to accumulate astaxanthin at a high percentage in dry weight after the first four days in TL-PSBRs.

    Original languageBritish English
    Article number596
    JournalBioengineering
    Volume10
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    StatePublished - May 2023

    Keywords

    • astaxanthin
    • biofilm
    • Haematococcus pluvialis
    • LED
    • porous substrate photobioreactor
    • sources of carbon

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