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  • Title: Dilution of solar radiation through "culture" lamination in photobioreactor rows facing south-north: a way to improve the efficiency of light utilization by cyanobacteria (Arthrospira platensis).
    Author: Carlozzi P.
    Journal: Biotechnol Bioeng; 2003 Feb 05; 81(3):305-15. PubMed ID: 12474253.
    Abstract:
    Efficient utilization of solar radiation for the photoautotrophic production of cyanobacterium biomass was achieved, using small pipes (ID = 0.01 m) arranged in rows in two photobioreactors facing south-north. A high Arthrospira yield of 47.7 g m(-2) (installation area) d(-1) was attained under outdoor conditions in a tubular undulating row photobioreactor (TURP-10r). During the summer, under a semicontinuous culture regime, the optimal biomass concentration (OBC) in TURP-5r was 6.0 g L(-1): it was 5.0 g L(-1) in TURP-10r. These OBCs made it possible to produce a biomass output rate of 2.7 +/- 0.2 g L(-1) d(-1) in the former and 2.1 +/- 0.1 g L(-1) d(-1) in the latter. When Arthrospira was grown at a preset dilution rate (0.3 d(-1)), sunrise cell density (SrCD) variations were not proportional to the drop of solar radiation. The SrCD was comparatively high at high solar radiation and decreased abruptly with decreasing solar radiation. There was a tendency to stabilize at low solar radiation. In both photobioreactors, the chlorophyll content of the Arthrospira biomass (% of the dry weight) was higher at sunrise than at sunset. A comparison of the chlorophyll biomass content in the TURPs showed no significant differences. Night biomass losses were very high (> 30% of the daylight productivity) when the culture temperature was kept constant at 31 +/- 1.0 degrees C: these losses fell to < 20% of the daylight productivity, when the night temperature of the cultures decreased according to the environmental temperature. Dilution of solar radiation was carried out using two quasi-laminated bioreactors. The rows of S-N facing bioreactors showed a very high growth yield in TURP-10r [about 2.1g (d.w.) MJ(-1)]. In TURP-10r, the high photic ratio (R(f) = 6), the high surface-to-volume ratio (S(ill)/V = 400 m(-1)) and the S-N facing of the rows (better than an E-W orientation) allowed for good results.
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