Application of microbubble air flotation to harvest Microcystis sp. from
agriculture wastewater: the regulation and mechanisms
Abstract
The harvesting of microalgae is the main bottleneck of its large-scale
biomass production, and seeking an efficient, green, and low-cost
microalgae harvesting technology is one of the urgent problems to be
solved. Microbubble air flotation has been proved to be an effective
measure, but the generation of the right size of microbubbles and the
mechanism of microbubbles-algal cells attachment are still unclear. In
this study, microbubble air flotation was used as a harvesting method
for Microcystis cultured in agricultural wastewater. The process
mechanism of microbubble air flotation harvesting microalgae in
wastewater was fully revealed from three aspects (the design of bubble
formation, the adhesion law, and the recovery rate of microalgae under
different working conditions). The results show that the length of the
release pipe is the main factor affecting the proportion of microbubbles
with particle size less than 50 μm. In the process of adhesion, when the
particle size of microbubbles is 0.6~1.7 times the size
of Microcystis, the adhesion efficiency of microbubbles to
Microcystis is the highest. Under the conditions of pressure 0.45
MPa, gas-liquid ratio 5% and release pipe length 100 cm, the harvesting
performance of Microcystis was the best. Microbubble air
flotation has better harvesting performance of Microcystis with
higher density. By understanding the mechanism of microbubble flotation,
the technical parameters of microbubble flotation for harvesting energy
microalgae are optimized to provide support for the development of
efficient and low-cost devices and equipment for collecting microalgae.