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Title Phycoremediation of wastewater by microalgae: a review
ID_Doc 19020
Authors Kaloudas, D; Pavlova, N; Penchovsky, R
Title Phycoremediation of wastewater by microalgae: a review
Year 2021
Published Environmental Chemistry Letters, 19.0, 4
DOI 10.1007/s10311-021-01203-0
Abstract Wastewater treatment requires the removal of contaminants, solids, nutrients, coliforms, and pathogenic bacteria. Classical treatments require high energy and induce secondary pollution by disinfectants. Alternatively, phycoremediation, which involves the use of algae to clean water, appears smarter and more sustainable because compounds such as nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, and minerals appear as 'nutrients' to feed algae rather than 'contaminants'. Phycoremediation thus allows to remove phosphates, nitrates, heavy metals, pesticides, hydrocarbons, nitrogen, and phosphorus. Moreover, the conditions favoring algal growth are disfavoring bacterial growth, which prevents the proliferation of pathogenic bacteria and improves water disinfection. Open pond systems have low maintenance, simple design, and reduce carbon footprint. Here we review factors controlling wastewater phycoremediation, and the most common systems. Microalgae are the main species used for phycoremediation. Efficiency is controlled by biotic factors, abiotic factors and algal strains. Photobioreactors appear unsuitable for large-scale applications due to cost, complicated operational procedures and scaling-up difficulties. Open pond systems are ideal for providing clean water in developing countries.
Author Keywords Microalgae; Wastewater phycoremediation systems; Wastewater treatment via algae
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:000634308200001
WoS Category Chemistry, Multidisciplinary; Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences
Research Area Chemistry; Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
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