Nannochloropsis oceanica cultivation in pilot-scale raceway ponds—from design to cultivation

Raceways ponds are the microalgal production systems most commonly used at industrial scale. In this work, two di erent raceway configurations were tested under the same processing conditions to compare their performance on the production of Nannochloropsis oceanica. Biomass productivity, biochemica...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cunha, Pedro (author)
Other Authors: Pereira, Hugo (author), Costa, Margarida (author), Pereira, João (author), Silva, Joana T. (author), Fernandes, Nuno (author), Varela, João (author), Silva, Joana (author), Simões, Manuel (author)
Format: article
Language:eng
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/13812
Country:Portugal
Oai:oai:sapientia.ualg.pt:10400.1/13812
Description
Summary:Raceways ponds are the microalgal production systems most commonly used at industrial scale. In this work, two di erent raceway configurations were tested under the same processing conditions to compare their performance on the production of Nannochloropsis oceanica. Biomass productivity, biochemical composition of the produced biomass, and power requirements to operate those reactors were evaluated. Water depths of 0.20 and 0.13 m, and culture circulation velocities of 0.30 and 0.15 m s1 were tested. A standard configuration, which had a full channel width paddlewheel, proved to be the most energy e cient, consuming less than half of the energy required by a modified configuration (had a half channel width paddlewheel). The later showed to have slightly higher productivity, not enough to o set the large di erence in energetic consumption. Higher flow velocity (0.30 m s1) led to a 1.7 g m2 d1 improvement of biomass productivity of the system, but it increased the energy consumption twice as compared to the 0.15 m s1 flow velocity. The latter velocity showed to be the most productive in lipids. A water depth of 0.20 m was the most suitable option tested to cultivate microalgae, since it allowed a 54% energy saving. Therefore, a standard raceway pond using a flow velocity of 0.3 m s1 with a 0.20 m water depth was the most e cient system for microalgal cultivation. Conversely, a flow velocity of 0.15 m s1 was the most suitable to produce lipids.