Kinetic Study of Air Bubbles-Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide (CTAB) Surfactant for Recovering Microalgae Biomass in a Foam Flotation Column

Owing to their efficient photosynthesis, microalgae tend to possess superior growth rates and high lipid production, hence their significance to the biofuel sector. The bulk harvesting of microalgae from cultures is a substantial stage in advancing the production of biomass-based fuels. However,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Muayad A. Shihab, Mohammed A. Dhahir, Hamad K. Mohammed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Indonesia 2020-07-01
Series:International Journal of Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijtech.eng.ui.ac.id/article/view/3983
id doaj-fbfee362613b41dd942f5768551828ce
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fbfee362613b41dd942f5768551828ce2020-11-25T03:22:19ZengUniversitas IndonesiaInternational Journal of Technology2086-96142087-21002020-07-0111344044910.14716/ijtech.v11i3.39833983Kinetic Study of Air Bubbles-Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide (CTAB) Surfactant for Recovering Microalgae Biomass in a Foam Flotation ColumnMuayad A. Shihab0Mohammed A. Dhahir1Hamad K. Mohammed2Petroleum and Gas Refinery Engineering, College of Petroleum Process Engineering, Tikrit University, Slah Al-deen, 34001, IraqPetroleum and Gas Refinery Engineering, College of Petroleum Process Engineering, Tikrit University, Slah Al-deen, 34001, IraqPetroleum and Gas Refinery Engineering, College of Petroleum Process Engineering, Tikrit University, Slah Al-deen, 34001, IraqOwing to their efficient photosynthesis, microalgae tend to possess superior growth rates and high lipid production, hence their significance to the biofuel sector. The bulk harvesting of microalgae from cultures is a substantial stage in advancing the production of biomass-based fuels. However, a reliable and cost-effective harvesting technology is not yet available. Foam flotation, which is a subcategory of the adsorptive bubble separation process, shows considerable promise for the harvesting and enrichment of microalgae biomass. The available literature indicates that virtually no data has been reported on the flotation kinetics of microalgae. Therefore, to better describe the recovery of microalgae by the flotation process, this work studied the flotation kinetics of the freshwater microalgae Chlorella vulgaris. The recovery of microalgae cells in a batch foam flotation column over time at different operating conditions was fitted to nine flotation kinetic models, including first, fractional, and second order kinetic models; a first order kinetic model with rectangular, exponential, gamma, and sinusoidal distributions of floatabilities; a second order kinetic model with rectangular distribution of floatabilities; a fully mixed reactor; and modified Kelsall flotation kinetic models. Evaluation of the kinetic models showed that the discrete rate constant model (i.e. modified Kelsall kinetic model) fitted the experimental data best. The modified Kelsall model shows the highest values of adjusted R2 (>0.995) and the lowest values of mean squared error (<2.63). Apart from the modified Kelsall model, which has discrete rate constants, no single kinetic model, with or without a continuous distribution, was sufficient to represent the flotation data, and the optimal model may vary under different conditions. More work is recommended using different freshwater and marine microalgae species.https://ijtech.eng.ui.ac.id/article/view/3983biofuelchlorella vulgarisfoam flotationkinetic rate constantultimate recovery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muayad A. Shihab
Mohammed A. Dhahir
Hamad K. Mohammed
spellingShingle Muayad A. Shihab
Mohammed A. Dhahir
Hamad K. Mohammed
Kinetic Study of Air Bubbles-Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide (CTAB) Surfactant for Recovering Microalgae Biomass in a Foam Flotation Column
International Journal of Technology
biofuel
chlorella vulgaris
foam flotation
kinetic rate constant
ultimate recovery
author_facet Muayad A. Shihab
Mohammed A. Dhahir
Hamad K. Mohammed
author_sort Muayad A. Shihab
title Kinetic Study of Air Bubbles-Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide (CTAB) Surfactant for Recovering Microalgae Biomass in a Foam Flotation Column
title_short Kinetic Study of Air Bubbles-Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide (CTAB) Surfactant for Recovering Microalgae Biomass in a Foam Flotation Column
title_full Kinetic Study of Air Bubbles-Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide (CTAB) Surfactant for Recovering Microalgae Biomass in a Foam Flotation Column
title_fullStr Kinetic Study of Air Bubbles-Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide (CTAB) Surfactant for Recovering Microalgae Biomass in a Foam Flotation Column
title_full_unstemmed Kinetic Study of Air Bubbles-Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide (CTAB) Surfactant for Recovering Microalgae Biomass in a Foam Flotation Column
title_sort kinetic study of air bubbles-cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (ctab) surfactant for recovering microalgae biomass in a foam flotation column
publisher Universitas Indonesia
series International Journal of Technology
issn 2086-9614
2087-2100
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Owing to their efficient photosynthesis, microalgae tend to possess superior growth rates and high lipid production, hence their significance to the biofuel sector. The bulk harvesting of microalgae from cultures is a substantial stage in advancing the production of biomass-based fuels. However, a reliable and cost-effective harvesting technology is not yet available. Foam flotation, which is a subcategory of the adsorptive bubble separation process, shows considerable promise for the harvesting and enrichment of microalgae biomass. The available literature indicates that virtually no data has been reported on the flotation kinetics of microalgae. Therefore, to better describe the recovery of microalgae by the flotation process, this work studied the flotation kinetics of the freshwater microalgae Chlorella vulgaris. The recovery of microalgae cells in a batch foam flotation column over time at different operating conditions was fitted to nine flotation kinetic models, including first, fractional, and second order kinetic models; a first order kinetic model with rectangular, exponential, gamma, and sinusoidal distributions of floatabilities; a second order kinetic model with rectangular distribution of floatabilities; a fully mixed reactor; and modified Kelsall flotation kinetic models. Evaluation of the kinetic models showed that the discrete rate constant model (i.e. modified Kelsall kinetic model) fitted the experimental data best. The modified Kelsall model shows the highest values of adjusted R2 (>0.995) and the lowest values of mean squared error (<2.63). Apart from the modified Kelsall model, which has discrete rate constants, no single kinetic model, with or without a continuous distribution, was sufficient to represent the flotation data, and the optimal model may vary under different conditions. More work is recommended using different freshwater and marine microalgae species.
topic biofuel
chlorella vulgaris
foam flotation
kinetic rate constant
ultimate recovery
url https://ijtech.eng.ui.ac.id/article/view/3983
work_keys_str_mv AT muayadashihab kineticstudyofairbubblescetyltrimethylammoniumbromidectabsurfactantforrecoveringmicroalgaebiomassinafoamflotationcolumn
AT mohammedadhahir kineticstudyofairbubblescetyltrimethylammoniumbromidectabsurfactantforrecoveringmicroalgaebiomassinafoamflotationcolumn
AT hamadkmohammed kineticstudyofairbubblescetyltrimethylammoniumbromidectabsurfactantforrecoveringmicroalgaebiomassinafoamflotationcolumn
_version_ 1724609886087544832