Research article2023Peer reviewedOpen access
Comparative life cycle assessment of conventional and novel microalgae production systems and environmental impact mitigation in urban-industrial symbiosis
Pechsiri, Joseph Santhi; Thomas, Jean-Baptiste E.; El Bahraoui, Naoufel; Acien Fernandez, Francisco Gabriel; Chaouki, Jamal; Chidami, Saad; Tinoco, Rodrigo Rivera; Pena Martin, Jose; Gomez, Cintia; Combe, Michel; Grondahl, Fredrik
Abstract
The versatility of microalgae biomass as candidates for various products and bioremediation needs motivates interests towards design and implementation of novel microalgae bioreactors. Conventional open-reactors are reliant on large quantities of sunlight and space while yields are constrained by outdoor environment conditions. Conversely, closed-reactor systems like bubble columns reduces these constrains on microalgae growth while occupying far less space at the expense of high energy demands, notably from lighting systems. A novel patented closed reactor design has recently been proposed that improves the bubble column concept with an efficient and effective lighting system. The present study uses Life Cycle Assessment approach to compare the environmental performance of conventional reactors and the proposed internally luminated novel closed reactor design, expressing impacts per kg biostimulant for the Scenedesmus almeriensis harvest from such units. All performance data was collected from a pilot facility in Almeria, Spain. Urban-industrial symbiosis scenarios are also portrayed in the study using wastewater and incinerator flue gas. Results show that under synthetic nutrient and carbon inputs in Spanish pilot operations, the cumulative energy demand for the novel photobioreactors is similar to conventional vertically-stacked horizon bioreactors but are substantially more demanding than conventional open reactors. However, when leveraging renewable energy sources and the photosynthesis process to consume wastestreams in urban-industrial symbiosis scenarios, the novel photobioreactor was able to achieve up to 80 % improvements in several impact categories e.g. eutrophication and climate change. Impact mitigation credits per kg dwt biomass across all energy scenarios in symbiosis amount to asymptotic to 1.8 kg CO(2)eq and asymptotic to 0.09 kg PO4 eq. This highlights that such closed and internally illuminated photobioreactors can be competitive with conventional reactors, and have potential to harness photosynthesis to reduce environmental burdens in an urban-industrial symbiosis setting. Possible economies of scale and the associated potential gains in efficiencies are further discussed.
Keywords
Biostimulant; Microalgae; Bioreactor; Life cycle assessment; Industrial Symbiosis
Published in
Science of the Total Environment
2023, Volume: 854, article number: 158445
Publisher: ELSEVIER
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG13 Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts
SDG12 Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns
UKÄ Subject classification
Bioremediation
Publication identifier
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.158445
Permanent link to this page (URI)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/119411