TY - GEN
T1 - An Experimental Study of the Growth and Hydrogen Production of C. Reinhardtii
AU - Tamburic, B.
AU - Burgess, S.
AU - Nixon, P. J.
AU - Hellgardt, K.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2010 18th World Hydrogen Energy Conference 2010, WHEC 2010, Proceedings. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Some unicellular green algae, such as C. reinhardtii, have the ability to photosynthetically produce molecular hydrogen under anaerobic conditions. They offer a biological route to renewable, carbon-neutral hydrogen production from two of nature’s most plentiful resources – sunlight and water. This process provides the additional benefit of carbon dioxide sequestration and the option of deriving valuable products from algal biomass. The growth of dense and healthy algal biomass is a prerequisite for efficient hydrogen production. This study investigates the growth of C. reinhardtii under different cyclic light regimes and at various continuous light intensities. Algal growth is characterised in terms of the cell count, chlorophyll content and optical density of the culture. The consumption of critical nutrients such as acetate and sulphate is measured by chromatography techniques. C. reinhardtii wild-type CC-124 strain is analysed in a 3 litre tubular flow photobioreactor featuring a large surface-to-volume ratio and excellent light penetration through the culture. Key parameters of the hydrogen production process are continuously monitored and controlled; these include pH, pO2, optical density, temperature, agitation and light intensity. Gas phase hydrogen production is determined by mass spectrometry.
AB - Some unicellular green algae, such as C. reinhardtii, have the ability to photosynthetically produce molecular hydrogen under anaerobic conditions. They offer a biological route to renewable, carbon-neutral hydrogen production from two of nature’s most plentiful resources – sunlight and water. This process provides the additional benefit of carbon dioxide sequestration and the option of deriving valuable products from algal biomass. The growth of dense and healthy algal biomass is a prerequisite for efficient hydrogen production. This study investigates the growth of C. reinhardtii under different cyclic light regimes and at various continuous light intensities. Algal growth is characterised in terms of the cell count, chlorophyll content and optical density of the culture. The consumption of critical nutrients such as acetate and sulphate is measured by chromatography techniques. C. reinhardtii wild-type CC-124 strain is analysed in a 3 litre tubular flow photobioreactor featuring a large surface-to-volume ratio and excellent light penetration through the culture. Key parameters of the hydrogen production process are continuously monitored and controlled; these include pH, pO2, optical density, temperature, agitation and light intensity. Gas phase hydrogen production is determined by mass spectrometry.
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M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85183838095
T3 - 18th World Hydrogen Energy Conference 2010, WHEC 2010, Proceedings
SP - 47
EP - 52
BT - Hydrogen Production Technologies - Part 1
A2 - Stolten, Detlef
A2 - Grube, Thomas
PB - Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH
T2 - 18th World Hydrogen Energy Conference, WHEC 2010
Y2 - 16 May 2010 through 21 May 2010
ER -