Microalgae cultivation in a tubular bioreactor and utilization of their cells

Chinese Journal of Oceanology and Limnology(1998)

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Abstract
In this study on the possiblities of microalgae technology as an option for CO 2 mitigation, many microalgae were isolated from seawater. Some species of the isolates, Chlamydomonas sp. strain YA-SH-1, which accumulates starch in cells under light and ferment ethanol in dark and anaerobic condition, was grown outdoors by using 50-L tubular bioreactors in batch cultivation and harvested. Using these cells, the performance of ethanol production was examined quantitatively in a 0.5-L scale fermentor. Another species, Tetraselmis sp. strain Tt-1, was cultivated in a semi-batch manner by a similar type of tubular bioreactor indoors and examined for its utilization. Tests showed these cells could be used as partial substitute for wood and kenaf pulp for processing into paper. With the idea of making microalgae produce cellulose by genetic engineering in their minds, the authors studied the structure of bacterial cellulose synthase genes and the low temperature-induced, reversible flocculation in a thermophilic blue green alga (Cyanobacterium), Synechocystis vulcanus in order to examine the feasibility of using these genes as gene source and the cynanobacterium as host.
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Key words
microalgae,tubular bioreactor,Tetraselmis,Chlamydomonas
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