TY - JOUR AV - none UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85095850402&doi=10.1016%2fj.jhazmat.2020.124455&partnerID=40&md5=6f0f6709081539a37bc74a21da298506 Y1 - 2021/// N1 - cited By 42 A1 - Leong, W.H. A1 - Lim, J.W. A1 - Lam, M.K. A1 - Lam, S.M. A1 - Sin, J.C. A1 - Samson, A. JF - Journal of Hazardous Materials KW - Flow rate; Nitrogen; Nutrients; Photobioreactors; Productivity; Wastewater treatment KW - Bacterial consortium; Biomass productivity; Extra-cellular polymeric substances; Hydraulic retention time; Nitrogen assimilation; Specific growth rate; Sustainable wastewater treatments; Synergistic interaction KW - Biomass KW - ammonia; arsenic; cadmium; copper; iron; manganese; nickel; nitrate; nitrite; nitrogen; zinc KW - biomass; bioreactor; bioremediation; concentration (composition); exopolymer; growth rate; microalga; wastewater; wastewater treatment; water treatment KW - activated sludge; algal growth; bacterium contamination; biomass; biomass production; bioremediation; biotransformation; carbon source; Chlorella vulgaris; community structure; continuous process; controlled study; daughter cell; flow rate; hydraulic retention time; inorganic nutrient; microalga; municipal wastewater; nitrification; nitrogen concentration; nitrogen fixation; nonhuman; nutrient uptake; polymerization; sewage treatment plant; titrimetry; waste water management; biomass; photobioreactor; wastewater KW - Bacteria (microorganisms) KW - Biomass; Microalgae; Nitrogen; Nutrients; Photobioreactors; Waste Water VL - 409 ID - scholars14946 SN - 03043894 PB - Elsevier B.V. TI - Novel sequential flow baffled microalgal-bacterial photobioreactor for enhancing nitrogen assimilation into microalgal biomass whilst bioremediating nutrient-rich wastewater simultaneously N2 - A novel sequential flow baffled microalgal-bacterial (SFB-AlgalBac) photobioreactor was designed to cater for the synergistic interactions between microalgal and bacterial consortia to enhance nitrogen assimilation into microalgal biomass from nutrient-rich wastewater medium. The performance of the SFB-AlgalBac photobioreactor was found to be optimum at the influent flow rate of 5.0 L/d, equivalent to 20 days of hydraulic retention time (HRT). The highest microalgal nitrogen assimilation rate (0.0271 /d) and biomass productivity (1350 mg/d) were recorded amidst this flow rate. Further increase to the 10.0 L/d flow rate reduced the photobioreactor performance, as evidenced by a reduction in microalgal biomass productivity (>10). The microalgal biomass per unit of nitrogen assimilated values were attained at 16.69 mg/mg for the 5.0 L/d flow rate as opposed to 7.73 mg/mg for the 10.0 L/d flow rate, despite both having comparable specific growth rates. Also, the prior influent treatment by activated sludge was found to exude extracellular polymeric substances which significantly improved the microalgal biomass settleability up to 37. The employment of SFB-AlgalBac photobioreactor is anticipated could exploit the low-cost nitrogen sources from nutrient-rich wastewaters via bioconversion into valuable microalgal biomass while fulfilling the requirements of sustainable wastewater treatment technologies. © 2020 Elsevier B.V. ER -