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Robust, high-productivity phototrophic carbon...
Journal article

Robust, high-productivity phototrophic carbon capture at high pH and alkalinity using natural microbial communities

Abstract

BackgroundBioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) has come to be seen as one of the most viable technologies to provide the negative carbon dioxide emissions needed to constrain global temperatures. In practice, algal biotechnology is the only form of BECCS that could be realized at scale without compromising food production. Current axenic algae cultivation systems lack robustness, are expensive and generally have marginal energy returns.ResultsHere it is shown that microbial communities sampled from alkaline soda lakes, grown as biofilms at high pH (up to 10) and high alkalinity (up to 0.5 kmol m−3 NaHCO3 and NaCO3) display excellent (>1.0 kg m−3 day−1) and robust (>80 days) biomass productivity, at low projected overall costs. The most productive biofilms contained >100 different species and were dominated by a cyanobacterium closely related to Phormidium kuetzingianum (>60%).ConclusionFrequent harvesting and red light were the key factors that governed the assembly of a stable and productive microbial community.

Authors

Sharp CE; Urschel S; Dong X; Brady AL; Slater GF; Strous M

Journal

Biotechnology for Biofuels and Bioproducts, Vol. 10, No. 1,

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

March 29, 2017

DOI

10.1186/s13068-017-0769-1

ISSN

1754-6834

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