Assessment of the production of 13C labeled compounds from phototrophic microalgae at laboratory scale

2003; Elsevier BV; Volume: 20; Issue: 4-6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/s1389-0344(03)00041-8

ISSN

1878-559X

Autores

F.G. Acién, Celeste Brindley Alı́as, María Carreño López, J.M. Fernández‐Sevilla, María José Ibáñez González, Rafael Núñez Gómez, E. Molina Grima,

Tópico(s)

Marine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies

Resumo

An integrated process for the indoor production of 13C labeled polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) from Phaeodactylum tricornutum is presented. The core of the process is a bubble column photobioreactor operating with recirculation of the exhaust gas using a low-pressure compressor. Oxygen accumulation in the system is avoided by bubbling the exhaust gas from the reactor in a sodium sulfite solution before returning to it. To achieve a high 13C enrichment in the biomass obtained, the culture medium is initially stripped of carbon, and labeled 13CO2 is automatically injected on-demand during operation for pH control and carbon supply. The reactor was operated in both batch and semicontinuous modes. In semicontinuous mode, the reactor was operated at a dilution rate of 0.01 h−1, resulting in a biomass productivity of 0.1 g l−1 per day. The elemental analysis of the inlet and outlet flows of the reactor showed that 64.9% of carbon was turned into microalgal biomass, 34.9% remained in the supernatant mainly as inorganic compounds. Only 3.8% of injected carbon was effectively fixed as the target labeled product (EPA). Regarding the isotopic composition of fatty acids, results showed that fatty acids were not labeled in the same proportion, the higher the number of carbons the lower the percentage of 13C. Isotopic composition of EPA ranged from 36.5 to 53.5%, as a function of the methodology used (GC–MS, EA–IRMS or gas chromatography–combustion–isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC–IRMS)). The low carbon uptake efficiency combined with the high cost of 13CO2 make necessary to redefine the designed culture system to increase the efficiency of the conversion of 13CO2 into the target product. Therefore, the possibility of removing 12C from the fresh medium, and recovering and recirculating the inorganic carbon in the supernatant and the organic carbon from the EPA depleted biomass was studied. The inorganic carbon of the fresh medium was removed by acidification and stripping with N2. The inorganic carbon of the supernatant was recovered also by acidification and subsequent stripping with N2. The operating conditions of this step were optimized for gas flow rate and type of contactor. A carbon recovery step for the depleted biomass was designed based on the catalytic oxidation to CO2 using CuO (10 wt.%) as catalyst with an oxygen enriched atmosphere (80% O2 partial pressure). In this way, the carbon losses reduced an 80.2% and the efficiency of the conversion of carbon in EPA was increased to 19.5%, which is close to the theoretical maximum. Further increase in 13CO2 use efficiency is only possible by additionally recovering other labeled by-products present in the biomass: proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and pigments.

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