Sustainable Use of CO2 and Wastewater from Mushroom Farm for Chlorella vulgaris Cultivation: Experimental and Kinetic Studies on Algal Growth and Pollutant Removal

Author:

Širić Ivan1ORCID,Abou Fayssal Sami23ORCID,Adelodun Bashir45ORCID,Mioč Boro1,Andabaka Željko1ORCID,Bachheti Archana6,Goala Madhumita6ORCID,Kumar Pankaj7ORCID,AL-Huqail Arwa A.8ORCID,Taher Mostafa A.910,Eid Ebrahem M.1112ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Zagreb, Faculty of Agriculture, Svetosimunska 25, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia

2. Department of Agronomy, Faculty of Agronomy, University of Forestry, 10 Kliment Ohridski Blvd, 1797 Sofia, Bulgaria

3. Department of Plant Production, Faculty of Agriculture, Lebanese University, Beirut 1302, Lebanon

4. Department of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, University of Ilorin, PMB 1515, Ilorin 240003, Nigeria

5. Department of Agricultural Civil Engineering, Kyungpook National University, Daegu 41566, Republic of Korea

6. Department of Environment Science, Graphic Era (Deemed to be University), Dehradun 248002, India

7. Agro-Ecology and Pollution Research Laboratory, Department of Zoology and Environmental Science, Gurukula Kangri (Deemed to Be University), Haridwar 249404, India

8. Department of Biology, College of Science, Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University, P.O. Box 84428, Riyadh 11671, Saudi Arabia

9. Biology Department, Faculty of Science and Arts, King Khalid University, Mohail Assir 61321, Saudi Arabia

10. Botany Department, Faculty of Science, Aswan University, Aswan 81528, Egypt

11. Biology Department, College of Science, King Khalid University, Abha 61321, Saudi Arabia

12. Botany Department, Faculty of Science, Kafrelsheikh University, Kafr El-Sheikh 33516, Egypt

Abstract

The potential use of carbon dioxide (CO2) and wastewater released from a mushroom farm for the cultivation of Chlorella vulgaris microalga was investigated in this study. For this purpose, a microcontroller-based aided CO2 capture and mixing prototype was constructed for the cultivation of C. vulgaris under varying concentrations of mushroom farm wastewater (0 as control, 50 and 100%). The results showed that the constructed prototype was helpful to maintain desirable CO2 levels (6000 ppm) in the mushroom cultivation chamber with constant CO2 supply to algal culture, i.e., 0.6% at an airflow rate of 50 mL/min. After 16 days of algal cultivation, it was observed that the maximum significant (p < 0.05) algal biomass production of 2.550 ± 0.073 mg/L was recorded in 50% wastewater concentration followed by 100% and control. Also, the maximum removal of selected mushroom farm wastewater pollutants, such as total dissolved solids (84.00 ± 1.37%), biochemical oxygen demand (90.17 ± 2.42%), chemical oxygen demand (91.53 ± 0.97%), total nitrogen (86.27 ± 1.60%) and total phosphorus (94.19 ± 2.33%), was achieved in 50% concentration of wastewater treatment with maximum first-order rate constant (k) values. In addition, the algal growth kinetics results showed that the logistic model fit best compared to the modified Gompertz model, based on selected validation tools, such as experimental vs. predicted values, coefficient of determination (R2 > 0.9938), model efficiency (ME > 0.98) and root mean square error (RMSE < 0.03). The post-harvest characterization of algal biomass revealed that the proximate, biochemical, ultimate elements (carbon, oxygen and nitrogen) and structural properties were significantly higher in 50% treatment than those in 100% and control treatments. Therefore, the findings of this study are novel and provide significant insight into the synergistic use of CO2 and wastewater produced by mushroom farms for algal cultivation and biological wastewater treatment.

Funder

Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University Researchers Supporting Project

Deanship of Scientific Research at King Khalid University, Abha, Saudi Arabia

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Horticulture,Plant Science

Reference58 articles.

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