Energies (Oct 2019)

Harvesting <i>Scenedesmus obliquus</i> via Flocculation of <i>Moringa oleifera</i> Seed Extract from Urban Wastewater: Proposal for the Integrated Use of Oil and Flocculant

  • Alejandro Ruiz-Marin,
  • Yunuen Canedo-Lopez,
  • Asteria Narvaez-Garcia,
  • José del Carmen Zavala-Loría,
  • Luis Alonso Dzul-López,
  • María Luisa Sámano-Celorio,
  • Jorge Crespo-Álvarez,
  • Eduardo García-Villena,
  • Pablo Agudo-Toyos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/en12203996
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 20
p. 3996

Abstract

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The objectives this study were to examine the integrated use of oil−coagulant for the direct extraction of coagulant from Moringa oleifera (MO) with 5% and 10% (NH4)2SO4 extractor solution to harvest Scenedesmus obliquus cultivated in urban wastewater and to analyze the oil extracted from MO and S. obliquus. An average content of 0.47 g of coagulant and 0.5 g of oil per gram of MO was obtained. Highly efficient algal harvest, 80.33% and 72.13%, was achieved at a dose of 0.38 g L−1 and pH 8−9 for 5% and 10% extractor solutions, respectively. For values above pH 9, the harvest efficiency decreases, producing a whitish water with 10% (NH4)2SO4 solution. The oil profile (MO and S. obliquus) showed contents of SFA of 36.24−36.54%, monounsaturated fatty acids of 32.78−36.13%, and polyunsaturated fatty acids of 27.63−30.67%. The biodiesel obtained by S. obliquus and MO has poor cold flow properties, indicating possible applications limited to warm climates. For both biodiesels, good fuel ignition was observed according to the high cetane number and positive correlation with SFA and negative correlation with the degree of saturation. This supports the use of MO as a potentially harmless bioflocculant for microalgal harvest in wastewater, contributing to its treatment, and a possible source of low-cost biodiesel.

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