Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
677550 | Biomass and Bioenergy | 2012 | 9 Pages |
To upgrade biogas produced from the anaerobic digestion of swine wastewater, an outdoor photobioreactor was established in this study. A mutant strain of microalga Chlorella sp. MM-2 was firstly isolated by ethyl methane sulfonate-induced random mutagenesis. The Chlorella sp. MM-2 grew in the presence of gas containing H2S < 100 ppm, and the growth capacity of the microalgal culture aerated with 80% CH4 was ∼70% that of the control culture (0% CH4). In the field study, CO2 capture efficiency of the Chlorella cultures, at a biomass concentration of 1.2 g L−1, from the desulfurized biogas (∼20% CO2, ∼70% CH4 and H2S < 100 ppm) was approximate 70% on cloudy days and 80% on sunny days. CH4 concentration in the effluent biogas from the Chlorella cultures was increased to approximate 84% on cloudy days and 87% on sunny days from its original 70%. The established outdoor photobioreactor system using a gas cycle-switching operation could be used as a CO2 capture model for biogas upgrading.
► An mutant microalga, Chlorella sp. MM-2, grew well in the presence of desulfurized biogas. ► The gas cycle-switching operation can capture approximate 50% of CO2 in the biogas. ► The gas cycle-switching operation can upgrade biogas of CH4 from 70% to 87%.