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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The Effect of Pretreatment Methods on Methane Yield and Nutrient Solubilization During Anaerobic Digestion of Microalgae

Hill, Alexander Scott 01 June 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Microalgal biomass is a candidate feedstock for biofuel production. To improve the sustainability of algae biofuel production, following biofuel recovery, the biomass nutrients should be recycled for additional algae growth. Anaerobic digestion of algae or oil-extracted algae is a means of recovering carbon and other nutrients, while offsetting algae production electricity demand. The major limiting factor in microalgae digestion is the low biodegradability of the cell walls. In the present study, various pretreatment technologies were tested at bench scale for their ability to improve raw, non-lipid-extracted algae biodegradability, which was assessed in terms of methane yield, volatile solids destruction, and solubilization of N, P, and K. The microalgae were harvested by sedimentation from outdoor wastewater-fed raceways ponds operated in coastal southern California. Four pretreatment methods (sonication, high-pressure homogenization, autoclaving, and boiling) were used on the algae slurries, each followed by batch anaerobic digestion (40 days at 35oC). Biomass sonication for 10 minutes showed the highest methane yield of 0.315 L CH4/ g VSIN, which is a 28% increase over the untreated control. Conversely, autoclaved algae slurry inhibited methane production (0.200 vs. 0.228 L CH4/ g VSIN for the treatment and control). A preliminary energy balance indicated that none of the pretreatments led to a net increase in energy conversion to biomethane. However, pretreatment did increase the initial N and P solubilization rates, but, after digestion, the ultimate N and P solubilization was nearly the same among the treatments and controls. After 40 days of digestion, solubilization of N, P, and K reached, respectively, 50-60% of average total Kjeldahl N, 40-50% of average total P, and 80-90% of average total K. Descriptive first-order models of solubilization were developed. Overall, certain pretreatments marginally improved methane yield and nutrient solubilization rate, which cast doubt on the efficacy of, or even the need for, algae biomass pretreatment prior to anaerobic digestion.
2

Nutrient Transformations in Algae Raceway Ponds Fed Municipal Wastewater

Reiff, Carter Michael 01 June 2015 (has links) (PDF)
While treating domestic wastewater, algae can be grown and harvested for biofuel production. Water is a vital resource and it is imperative to conserve and reuse as much as possible. Several pilot and lab scale experiments were conducted to further research into a full scale wastewater treatment and biofuel production facility. This thesis will include these topics: nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations of clarified wastewater pond feed, nitrogen and phosphorus transformations by algae, and the potential of algae cell disruption technologies to increase nutrient solubilization. The pilot scale experiments were conducted using nine 33 m2, 0.3 m deep multi-culture raceway algae ponds being continuously mixed. These ponds were setup in triplicates and fed municipal wastewater in the form of primary clarifier effluent. The three experiments conducted using these pilot scale ponds were: grab and 24-hour composite influent comparison, nitrogen and phosphorus of various hydraulic residence times (HRTs), and nitrogen and phosphorus nutrient depletion with water recycle. The grab and 24-hour composite comparison was conducted from July 30 to December 3, 2014 and compared the dissolved reactive phosphorus (DRP) and total ammonia nitrogen (TAN) concentrations of the two sample types. Equations were made to convert from grab to 24-hour concentrations. The sample types for both DRP and TAN were on average within 10% and essentially the same. A comparison of data from ponds operating at different HRTs was collected from October 30 and November 6, 2013 and October 29 and November 5, 2014. There were linear correlations between different HRTs and both soluble nitrogen and DRP. Equations were made to calculate the expected removal of ponds using the HRT. The nutrient depletion with water recycle experiment was conducted during October 15-29, 2015. Soluble nitrogen removal was linear with a rate of 1.5 mg-N/L-day and required 14 days to drop below 5 mg-N/L in the ponds. DRP removal was also linear with a rate of 0.18 mg-P/L-day. The algae cell disruption solubilization experiments were conducted using homogenization, sonication, autoclaving, and boiling pretreatment technologies. Algae harvested from the pilot ponds was anaerobically digested and then aerobically digested in an attempt to reuse nutrients for continued growth. It was found that there was no significant difference between the pretreated and non-pretreated digested samples. Keywords: algae, raceway pond, nutrient transformation, anaerobic digestion, aerobic digestion, assimilation, volatilization, nitrogen, phosphorus, pretreatment of algae, nutrient resolubilization, nutrient solubilization
3

Isolation and characterization of novel bacterial strains to alleviate abiotic stress in greenhouse ornamental crops

Nordstedt, Nathan P. 01 October 2021 (has links)
No description available.

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