< Back to previous page

Publication

Autoflocculation of microalgae, via magnesium hydroxide precipitation, in a high rate algal pond treating municipal wastewater in the South Australian Riverland

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

High rate algal ponds (HRAP) are considered a promising system for coupling wastewater treatment with the growth of microalgae biomass. However, the absence of a cost-effective harvesting method limits this application. In this study, in situ autoflocculation, via magnesium hydroxide precipitation, was assessed in a HRAP containing 33 m 3 of HRAP treated municipal wastewater which had a total suspended solids concentration of 115.00 mg L 1. Autoflocculation was induced using MgCl 2 .6H 2 O to increase the magnesium concentration of the wastewater to 82.63 ± 0.09 mg L 1 , followed by the addition of 182 mg L 1 of slaked lime to increase the pH to 11. A high flocculation efficiency, determined by the reduction in turbidity, of 91.52 ± 0.57% was achieved with good removal of total suspended solids, 84.93 ± 1.00%. Excellent nutrient removal, 91.10 ± 0.14% of total phosphorus, and pathogen removal, a 3 log 10 reduction in E. coli MPN 100 mL 1 , was also observed. Hydro-chemical modelling (PHREECQC-2) identified improvements in operational conditions to reduce cost. Auto-flocculation, via magnesium hydroxide precipitation, was shown to be a promising method for harvesting microalgae and nutrients.
Journal: Algal research
ISSN: 2211-9264
Volume: 59
Publication year:2021
Keywords:High rate algal ponds, Wastewater, Biomass, Autoflocculation, Microalgae
BOF-keylabel:yes
IOF-keylabel:yes
BOF-publication weight:1
Authors:International
Authors from:Higher Education
Accessibility:Closed