Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
581458 Journal of Hazardous Materials 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract
A flat plate and a tubular packed-bed photobioreactor with an algal-bacterial biofilm attached onto Poraver® beads carriers, a flat plate and a tubular photobioreactor with the biofilm attached onto the reactor walls, and an algal-turf reactor were compared in terms of BOD removal efficiencies, elimination capacities, and stability. A control column photobioreactor with suspended algal-bacterial biomass was also tested to compare the performance of biofilm photobioreactors with conventional algal-based processes. When the algal-bacterial biomass was immobilized onto Poraver® the process never reached a steady state due to a poor homogenization in the bioreactor. When the biofilm was formed onto the reactor wall (or reactor base) the process was stable. A maximum degradation rate of 295 mg BOD l−1 h−1 was achieved in the algal-turf reactor although control experiments performed in the dark showed atmospheric O2 diffusion represented 55% of the oxygenation capacity in this system. BOD removal rates of 108, and 92 mg BOD l−1 h−1 were achieved in the tubular and flat plate biofilm reactors, respectively, compared to 77 mg BOD l−1 h−1 in the control suspended bioreactor. In addition, all biofilm photobioreactors produced an easily settleable biomass. Evidence was found that biomass attachment to the reactor's wall improved stability.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Health and Safety
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