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Seasonal variation in microalgal biomass production is a well-known challenge when optimizing economics for algal fuel conversion, especially given the fluctuation in biomass production between winter and summer. Wet storage offers significant potential for cost and energy savings compared to dewatering and dry storage. This study demonstrates the feasibility of preserving harvested Scenedesmus acutus biomass through wet anaerobic storage for use in biochemical conversion. Anaerobic storage effectively preserved biomass with minimal degradation of carbohydrates and preservation of lipids and proteins. Screening experiments identified optimal pretreatment conditions for stored biomass. Scale-up of pretreatment enabled fermentation of the hydrolysate to butyric acid and indicated no observable difference in conversion between unstored and stored biomass. Lipid extraction improved by a relative 12% for stored biomass. These results suggest that wet anaerobic storage can effectively manage seasonal variation in biomass production and is compatible with biochemical approaches for biofuel production.
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Lynn M. Wendt
Idaho National Laboratory
Bradley D. Wahlen
Idaho National Laboratory
Eric P. Knoshaug
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering
Arizona State University
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Idaho National Laboratory
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Wendt et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0241818e0c74a09a75fe18 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.0c03790