Mass Cultivation of Microalgae: II. A Large Species Pulsing Blue Light Concept

Author:

Eilertsen Hans Chr.12,Strømholt Jo2,Bergum John-Steinar2,Eriksen Gunilla Kristina1,Ingebrigtsen Richard1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Norwegian College of Fishery Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, N-9037 Tromsø, Norway

2. Finnfjord AS, N-9305 Finnsnes, Norway

Abstract

If mass cultivation of photoautotrophic microalgae is to gain momentum and find its place in the new “green future”, exceptional optimizations to reduce production costs must be implemented. Issues related to illumination should therefore constitute the main focus, since it is the availability of photons in time and space that drives synthesis of biomass. Further, artificial illumination (e.g., LEDs) is needed to transport enough photons into dense algae cultures contained in large photobioreactors. In the present research project, we employed short-term O2 production and 7-day batch cultivation experiments to evaluate the potential to reduce illumination light energy by applying blue flashing light to cultures of large and small diatoms. Our results show that large diatom cells allow more light penetration for growth compared to smaller cells. PAR (400–700 nm) scans yielded twice as much biovolume-specific absorbance for small biovolume (avg. 7070 μm3) than for large biovolume (avg. 18,703 μm3) cells. The dry weight (DW) to biovolume ratio was 17% lower for large than small cells, resulting in a DW specific absorbance that was 1.75 times higher for small cells compared to large cells. Blue 100 Hz square flashing light yielded the same biovolume production as blue linear light in both the O2 production and batch experiments at the same maximum light intensities. We therefore suggest that, in the future, more focus should be placed on researching optical issues in photobioreactors, and that cell size and flashing blue light should be central in this.

Funder

Norwegian Regional Funds RDA

Norwegian Research Council

Innovation Norway

Troms Holding

UiT-The Arctic University of Norway

Finnfjord AS

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Biomedical Engineering,Biochemistry,Bioengineering,Biotechnology

Reference89 articles.

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