| Literature DB >> 31558732 |
A Barros1, H Pereira2, J Campos1, A Marques1, J Varela2, J Silva3.
Abstract
Industrial scale-up of microalgal cultures is often a protracted step prone to culture collapse and the occurrence of unwanted contaminants. To solve this problem, a two-stage scale-up process was developed - heterotrophically Chlorella vulgaris cells grown in fermenters (1st stage) were used to directly inoculate an outdoor industrial autotrophic microalgal production unit (2nd stage). A preliminary pilot-scale trial revealed that C. vulgaris cells grown heterotrophically adapted readily to outdoor autotrophic growth conditions (1-m3 photobioreactors) without any measurable difference as compared to conventional autotrophic inocula. Biomass concentration of 174.5 g L-1, the highest value ever reported for this microalga, was achieved in a 5-L fermenter during scale-up using the heterotrophic route. Inocula grown in 0.2- and 5-m3 industrial fermenters with mean productivity of 27.54 ± 5.07 and 31.86 ± 2.87 g L-1 d-1, respectively, were later used to seed several outdoor 100-m3 tubular photobioreactors. Overall, all photobioreactor cultures seeded from the heterotrophic route reached standard protein and chlorophyll contents of 52.18 ± 1.30% of DW and 23.98 ± 1.57 mg g-1 DW, respectively. In addition to providing reproducible, high-quality inocula, this two-stage approach led to a 5-fold and 12-fold decrease in scale-up time and occupancy area used for industrial scale-up, respectively.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31558732 PMCID: PMC6763493 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-50206-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Preliminary scale-up using heterotrophically grown Chlorella vulgaris up to a 5-L fermenter (heterotrophic route). This procedure was compared to the standard scale-up process whose inoculum corresponded to C. vulgaris cells cultivated photoautotrophically in flasks with a maximum volume of 5 L (autotrophic route). Either inoculum was used to seed 1 m3 flat panel (FP) photobioreactors operated outdoors under photoautotrophic conditions. The culture volumes (litres) and the duration (days) of each scale-up step are indicated.
Figure 2Auto- (A) and heterotrophic (B) growth of C. vulgaris grown in 5-L production systems. Results are expressed as the mean of dry weight and corresponding standard deviation obtained from three independent replicates.
Mean and maximum biomass productivities and growth rates of flat panels inoculated from autotrophic and heterotrophic origins (n = 29).
| Inoculum | Mean productivity | Max productivity | Mean growth rate (d−1) | Max growth rate (d−1) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Autotrophic | 0.11 ± 0.02a | 0.15 | 0.80 ± 0.30a | 1.28 |
| Heterotrophic | 0.10 ± 0.01a | 0.12 | 0.60 ± 0.29a | 1.24 |
Same letters in superscript after the values denote there was no significant statistical differences (p > 0.05) between values on the same column.
Figure 3Industrial scale-up using heterotrophically grown Chlorella vulgaris up to a 5000-L fermenter (heterotrophic route). This procedure enabled the direct seeding of eight 100-m3 industrial photobioreactors, instead of the standard scale-up procedure using photoautotrophically grown inocula (autotrophic route), decreasing scale-up time and the area of the production plant dedicated to the scale-up process.
Figure 4Chlorella vulgaris AGF002 cultivated heterotrophically in 200 and 5000-L industrial scale fermenters (n = 4) (A) or grown autotrophically in 100-m3 photobioreactors upon transfer from heterotrophic conditions (n = 8) (B). Values are the mean and corresponding standard deviation of four and eight replicates, respectively.
Mean and maximum biomass productivities and growth rates of industrial 200 and 5000 L fermenters.
| Reactor volume (L) | Mean productivity | Maximum productivity | Mean growth rate | Maximum growth rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 200 | 27.54 ± 5.07a | 32.56 | 0.92 ± 0.11a | 2.44 |
| 5000 | 31.86 ± 2.87a | 34.82 | 0.88 ± 0.26a | 2.32 |
Same letters in superscript after the values denote there was no significant statistical differences (p > 0.05) between values on the same column.
Figure 5Total chlorophyll and protein content of the industrial autotrophic Chlorella vulgaris cultures from heterotrophic inocula. Error bars represent the standard deviation calculated from eight replicates (n = 8).