Collection and conversion of algal lipid

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Title Collection and conversion of algal lipid
Publication Type dissertation
School or College College of Engineering
Department Civil & Environmental Engineering
Author Lin, Ching-chieh
Date 2016
Description Sustainable economic activities mandate a significant replacement of fossil energy by renewable forms. Algae-derived biofuels are increasingly seen as an alternative source of energy with potential to supplement the world's ever increasing demand. Our primary objective is, once the algae were cultivated, to eliminate or make more efficient energy-intensive processing steps of collection, drying, grinding, and solvent extraction prior to conversion. To overcome the processing barrier, we propose to streamline from cultivated algae to biodiesel via algal biomass collection by sand filtration, cell rupturing with ozone, and immediate transesterification. To collect the algal biomass, the specific Chlorococcum aquaticum suspension was acidified to pH 3.3 to promote agglomeration prior to sand filtration. The algae-loaded filter bed was drained of free water and added with methanol and ozonated for 2 min to rupture cell membrane to accelerate release of the cellular contents. The methanol solution now containing the dissolved lipid product was collected by draining, while the filter bed was regenerated by further ozonation when needed. The results showed 95% collection of the algal biomass from the suspension and a 16% yield of lipid from the algae, as well as restoration of filtration velocity of the sand bed via ozonation. The results further showed increased lipid yield upon cell rupturing and transesterified products composed entirely of fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) compounds, demonstrating that the rupture and transesterification processes could proceed consecutively in the same medium, requiring no separate steps of drying, extraction, and conversion. The FAME products from algae without exposure to ozone were mainly of 16 to 18 carbons containing up to 3 double bonds, while those from algae having been ozonated were smaller, highly saturated hydrocarbons. The new technique streamlines individual steps from cultivated algal lipid to transesterified products and represents an improvement over existing energy-intensive steps.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Algal lipid; Biodiesel; Harvest; Ozonation; Sand filtration
Dissertation Name Doctor of Philosophy
Language eng
Rights Management ©Ching-chieh Lin
Format application/pdf
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 27,027 bytes
Identifier etd3/id/4123
ARK ark:/87278/s6cg2zdg
Setname ir_etd
ID 197673
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6cg2zdg
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