Microalgal bacterial flocs

MaB-flocs

Microalgae do not settle by gravity, therefore expensive harvesting techniques must be applied. This is a major bottleneck of microalgal technology. Bioflocculation of microalgae and bacteria addresses this.

MaB-flocs or Microalgal Bacterial flocs settle by gravity, up to density of 20 g per liter. This is a major improvement for microalgal technology for wastewater treatment.

Currently, MaB-flocs are being applied for sewage treatment on lab and pilot scale in Germany, New Zealand and Belgium. The idea is to scavenge nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus from the wastewater, sometimes combined with flue gas treatment.

Nutritional evaluation of such microbial protein or single cell protein as a unconventional protein feedstuff or ingredient in artificial animal feeds have gained much importance lately. Its nutritional strengths and bottlenecks are much described lately.[1]

References

  1. Lunda, Roman; Roy, Koushik; Dvorak, Petr; Kouba, Antonin; Mraz, Jan (11 November 2020). "Recycling biofloc waste as novel protein source for crayfish with special reference to crayfish nutritional standards and growth trajectory". Scientific Reports. 10 (1): 19607. doi:10.1038/s41598-020-76692-0. PMC 7658255. PMID 33177672.
  • Turner, S. J.; Biswas, K.; Valigore, J. M.; O'Sullivan, A. D. (2008). "Growth of microalgal-bacterial biomass on primary treated wastewater". hdl:10092/3533. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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