Freshwater microalgae Chlorella vulgaris was cultured and induced with strigolactone (GR24) to simultaneously eliminate nutrients in biogas slurry and purify biogas. Treatment with 10-7 M GR24 yielded maximum growth rate and… Click to show full abstract
Freshwater microalgae Chlorella vulgaris was cultured and induced with strigolactone (GR24) to simultaneously eliminate nutrients in biogas slurry and purify biogas. Treatment with 10-7 M GR24 yielded maximum growth rate and mean daily productivity for algae at 0.187 ± 0.06 d-1 and 0.097 ± 0.008 g L-1 d-1, respectively. Results from chlorophyll fluorescence transients method demonstrated that moderate concentration of GR24 could enhance the photosynthetic performance of microalgae. In addition, GR24 affected intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity and chlorophyll-a content. Maximum chemical oxygen demand, total nitrogen, and CO2 removal efficiencies were 78.62 ± 2.36%, 76.47 ± 1.53% and 64.05 ± 1.15% with 10-7 M GR24 induction, respectively. Further, highest total phosphorus removal efficiency (80.27 ± 1.93%) was observed at 10-9 M. The optimal GR24 concentration range was determined to be between 10-9 and 10-7 M in consideration with nutrient and CO2 removal efficiencies.
               
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