A local strain of Chlorella vulgaris was cultivated by using cheese whey (CW), white wine lees (WL) and glycerol (Gly), coming from local agro-industrial activities, as C sources (2.2 g C L−1) to support algae production under mixotrophic conditions in Lombardy. In continuous mode, Chlorella increased biomass production compared with autotrophic conditions by 1.5–2 times, with the best results obtained for the CW substrate, i.e. 0.52 g L−1 d−1 of algal biomass vs. 0.24 g L−1 d−1 of algal biomass for autotrophic conditions, and protein content for both conditions adopted close to 500 g kg−1 DM. Mixotrophic conditions gave a much higher energy recovery efficiency (EF) than autotrophic conditions, i.e. organic carbon energy efficiency (EFoc) of 32% and total energy efficiency (Eft) of 8%, respectively, suggesting the potential for the culture of algae as a sustainable practice to recover efficiently waste-C and a means of local protein production.

Mixotrophic cultivation of Chlorella for local protein production using agro-food by-products / S. Salati, G. D'Imporzano, B. Menin, D. Veronesi, B. Scaglia, P. Abbruscato, P. Mariani, F. Adani. - In: BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 0960-8524. - 230(2017), pp. 82-89.

Mixotrophic cultivation of Chlorella for local protein production using agro-food by-products

S. Salati
Primo
;
G. D'Imporzano
Secondo
;
D. Veronesi;B. Scaglia;F. Adani
Ultimo
2017

Abstract

A local strain of Chlorella vulgaris was cultivated by using cheese whey (CW), white wine lees (WL) and glycerol (Gly), coming from local agro-industrial activities, as C sources (2.2 g C L−1) to support algae production under mixotrophic conditions in Lombardy. In continuous mode, Chlorella increased biomass production compared with autotrophic conditions by 1.5–2 times, with the best results obtained for the CW substrate, i.e. 0.52 g L−1 d−1 of algal biomass vs. 0.24 g L−1 d−1 of algal biomass for autotrophic conditions, and protein content for both conditions adopted close to 500 g kg−1 DM. Mixotrophic conditions gave a much higher energy recovery efficiency (EF) than autotrophic conditions, i.e. organic carbon energy efficiency (EFoc) of 32% and total energy efficiency (Eft) of 8%, respectively, suggesting the potential for the culture of algae as a sustainable practice to recover efficiently waste-C and a means of local protein production.
By-products carbon; Chlorella vulgaris; Energy efficiency; Mixotrophic; Protein production; Bioengineering; Environmental Engineering; Waste Management and Disposal
Settore AGR/13 - Chimica Agraria
2017
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/485975
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