Enhancing high-density microalgae cultivation via exogenous supplementation of biostimulant derived from onion peel waste for sustainable biodiesel production

Suparmaniam, U. and Lam, M.K. and Lim, J.W. and Rawindran, H. and Ho, Y.C. and Tan, I.S. and Kansedo, J. and Lim, S. and Cheng, Y.W. and Raza Naqvi, S. (2024) Enhancing high-density microalgae cultivation via exogenous supplementation of biostimulant derived from onion peel waste for sustainable biodiesel production. Journal of Environmental Management, 359.

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Abstract

Microalgae demonstrate significant potential as a source of liquid-based biofuels. However, increasing biomass productivity in existing cultivation systems is a critical prerequisite for their successful integration into large-scale operations. Thus, the current work aimed to accelerate the growth of C. vulgaris via exogenous supplementation of biostimulant derived from onion peel waste. Under the optimal growth conditions, which entailed a biostimulant dosage of 37.5 v/v, a pH of 3, an air flow rate of 0.4 L/min, and a 2 v/v inoculum harvested during the mid-log phase, yielded a maximum biomass concentration of 1.865 g/L. Under the arbitrarily optimized parameters, a comparable growth pattern was evident in the upscaled cultivation of C. vulgaris, underscoring the potential commercial viability of the biostimulant. The biostimulant, characterized through gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) analysis, revealed a composition rich in polyphenolic and organo-sulphur compounds, notably including allyl trisulfide (28.13), methyl allyl trisulfide (23.04), and allyl disulfide (20.78), showcasing potent antioxidant properties. Additionally, microalgae treated with the biostimulant consistently retained their lipid content at 18.44 without any significant reduction. Furthermore, a significant rise in saturated fatty acid (SFA) content was observed, with C16:0 and C18:1 dominating both bench-scale (44.08 and 14.01) and upscaled (51.12 and 13.07) microalgae cultures, in contrast to the control group where C18:2 was prevalent. Consequently, SFA contents reached 54.35 and 65.43 in bench-scale and upscaled samples respectively, compared to 33.73 in the control culture. These compositional characteristics align well with the requirements for producing high-quality crude biodiesel. © 2024 Elsevier Ltd

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: cited By 0
Uncontrolled Keywords: Biodiesel; Biomass; Gas chromatography; Liquid chromatography; Mass spectrometry; Microorganisms; Saturated fatty acids; Sulfur compounds, Bench scale; Biodiesel production; Biomass productivity; Biostimulant; Fatty acid contents; Large-scales; Micro-algae; Microalgae cultivation; Onion peel waste; Vulgaris, Microalgae, biodiesel; saturated fatty acid; biofuel, airflow; antioxidant; biofuel; biomass; cultivation; food supplementation; microalga; solid waste, airflow; algal growth; Article; Chlorella vulgaris; food waste; inoculation; microalga; onion; supplementation; biomass; growth, development and aging; mass fragmentography, Biofuels; Biomass; Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry; Microalgae; Onions
Depositing User: Mr Ahmad Suhairi UTP
Date Deposited: 04 Jun 2024 14:19
Last Modified: 04 Jun 2024 14:19
URI: https://khub.utp.edu.my/scholars/id/eprint/19688

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