Knowledge Agora



Scientific Article details

Title Production of Microalgal Slow-Release Fertilizer by Valorizing Liquid Agricultural Digestate: Growth Experiments with Tomatoes
ID_Doc 6857
Authors Jimenez, R; Markou, G; Tayibi, S; Barakat, A; Chapsal, C; Monlau, F
Title Production of Microalgal Slow-Release Fertilizer by Valorizing Liquid Agricultural Digestate: Growth Experiments with Tomatoes
Year 2020
Published Applied Sciences-Basel, 10, 11
DOI 10.3390/app10113890
Abstract Anaerobic Digestion (AD) is a process that is well-known and fast-developing in Europe. AD generates large amounts of digestate, especially in livestock-intensive areas. Digestate has potential environmental issues due to nutrients (such as nitrogen) lixiviation or volatilization. Using liquid digestate as a nutrient source for microalgae growth is considered beneficial because digestate could be valorized and upgraded by the production of an added value product. In this work, microalgal biomass produced using liquid digestate from an agricultural biogas plant was investigated as a slow-release fertilizer in tomatoes. Monoraphidium sp. was first cultivated at different dilutions (1:20, 1:30, 1:50), in indoor laboratory-scale trials. The optimum dilution factor was determined to be 1:50, with a specific growth rate of 0.13 d(-1) and a complete nitrogen removal capacity in 25 days of culture. Then, outdoor experiments were conducted in a 110 dm(3) vertical, closed photobioreactors (PBRs) in batch and semi-continuous mode with 1:50 diluted liquid digestate. During the batch mode, the microalgae were able to remove almost all NH4+ and 65 (+/- 13) % of PO43-, while the microalgal growth rate reached 0.25 d(-1). After the batch mode, the cultures were switched to operate under semi-continuously conditions. The cell densities were maintained at 1.3 x 10(7) cells mL(-1) and a biomass productivity around 38.3 mg TSS L-1 d(-1) during three weeks was achieved, where after that it started to decline due to unfavorable weather conditions. Microalgae biomass was further tested as a fertilizer for tomatoes growth, enhancing by 32% plant growth in terms of dry biomass compared with the control trials (without fertilization). Similar performances were achieved in tomato growth using synthetic fertilizer or digestate. Finally, the leaching effect in soils columns without plant was tested and after 25 days, only 7% of N was leached when microalgae were used, against 50% in the case of synthetic fertilizer.
Author Keywords circular economy; growth plant tests; nutrients leaching; nutrients recycling; photo-bioreactor; slow released fertilizer
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:000543385900227
WoS Category Chemistry, Multidisciplinary; Engineering, Multidisciplinary; Materials Science, Multidisciplinary; Physics, Applied
Research Area Chemistry; Engineering; Materials Science; Physics
PDF https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/11/3890/pdf?version=1591256796
Similar atricles
Scroll