Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
GUIDED BY:
MR V.N.LAD
LECTURER CHED
PREPARED BY:
MOHIT NIRANAJNE
SURAT - 395007
Sardar Vallabhbhai National Institute of Technology
This is to certify that the under mentioned students bearing B.Tech IV (Chemical) 7th
Semester have satisfactorily completed a Project on .SCALE UP STUDY OF
PRODUCTION OF NANOPARTICLE USING ATTRITION MILL, during the year
2009-10.
MOHIT NIRANAJANE
U06CH125
MR V.N. LAD
Guide
2
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
We are also thankful to S.V.N.I.T, Surat and its staff for providing
this opportunity which helped in gaining knowledge and to make
this work successful.
MOHIT NIRANJANE
U06CH125
Thank You
3
Abtract
Nowadays we are hearing that we will be short of petrol which is now basic requirement
of our life and we require more fuel for that algae can be used as source main source of
energy!!
Due to global warming ice at Antarctica pole is going to melt….so this could be play
major role in the reduction of co2 emission in the environment
You won’t believe that now days in aircraft “algae biodisel” is used and it is successful.
Many large and small countries are focusing on this free and neglected source of energy.
Sunday February 24, 2008, a Boeing 747-400 flew from London to Amsterdam with a
20% mixture of biofuel …… isn’t it is amazing.
It is rich in protein content ..edible algae can be used for removing malnourishment of
poor children’s .
sewage is being treated with algae …so sewage water treatment with utilization of a co2
from one algae cultivation we can treat both sewage and co2.
It is good biomass …can be used for fertilizaer also this what is algae …..which we are
going to cultivate !!!!!
4
Index
Chapter no. Name Page no .
1 Introduction
2 Classification of Algae for Usage as a Bioreactor
3 Factors consider for growing of Algae for Usage as a
Bioreactor
4 Cultivation of Algae
4.1 Cultivation of Algae for CO2 Sequestration
4.2 Cultivation of Algae in Desert
4.3 Cultivation of Algae in Open ponds
4.4 Cultivation of Algae in Marine environment
4.5 Cultivation of Macro Algae
5 Types of Photo Bioreactor
5.1 Tubular photobioreactors
5.2 Flat-plate photobioreactors
5.3 Vertical-column photobioreactors
6 Products of Algae-Bioreactor
7 Other Uses of Algae
7.1 Extraction of Algae oil
7.2 Biodisel from algae oil
7.3 Uses of algae oil left over
7.4 Algae oil yield
7.5 Why we need this ??
7.6 Is it feasible ??
7.7 Importantance ….
7.8 Conclusions
7.9 Refrences
Chapter 1: Introduction
As we all know about algae it can grow on anything .It has wide range of condition.
Algae are usually found in damp places or bodies of water.algae are common in
terrestrial as well as aquatic environments. , terrestrial algae are common in moist,
tropical regions than dry ones. Algae grow in almost every habitat in every part of the
world. The following are examples of non-marine habitats.
5
1) Animals: Reported substrates include turtles, snails, rotifers, worms, crustacean,
alligators, three-toed sloths, aquatic ferns, freshwater sponges and some other
animals.
2) Aquatic plants: Algae grow on and inside water plants (including other algae)
3) Artificial substrates: Wooden posts and fences, cans and bottles etc. all provide
algal habitats.
4) Billabongs & lagoons: Rich microalgal habitats, particularly for desmids.
5) Bogs, marshes & swamps
6) Farm Dams
7) Hot springs
8) Lakes
9) Mud and sand
10) Ponds (ephemeral), puddles, roadside ditches and rock pools
11) Reservoirs
12) Rivers
13) Rock (internal & surface)
14) Saline Lagoons
15) Saline Lakes & Marshes
16) Salt marshes and salt lakes
17) Sewage
18) Snow
19) Soil
20) Streams
21) Terrestrial plants - tree trunks, branches, shady sides of trees, damp walls, surface
of and inside leaves. [1]
6
Chapter 2: Classification of Algae
7
1) Hydrophilic algae:
2) Edaphic algae:
Terestial algae are called Edaphic algae. They live upon or inside the surface of
earth. Edaphic algae classified into two types,
3) Aerial algae:
These are aerial forms of algae. They are found upon trunks of trees, walls,
fencing wire, rocks and animals. Aerial algae are classified into four types. They are,
ii) Epiphloephytes
4) Cryophytic algae:
Algae living on ice and snow are called cryophytes or cryophytic algae.
5) Symbionts or Endophytes:
8
Algae growing in symbiotic association with other plants are called symbionts. There are
three types. They are,
6) Endozoic algae:
Algae living inside the body of animals are called Endozoic algae.
7) Parasites
9
3) Rhodophytes (red algae)
When cultivating (growing) algae, several factors must be considered, and different
algae have different requirements. Essential factors include water, carbon dioxide,
10
minerals and light .The algae basically consist of the plant-like organisms (particularly,
they are chloroplast-containing eucaryotes) that for the most part live in the sea, but also
in freshwater as well as moist terrestrial habitats and as lichen endosymbionts.
1) water as requirement :
Algae’s backbone is water It is totally depend on water due to which most algae
lack rigidity, and usually have wavy shape. Since water surrounds the plant on all sides,
individual algal cells absorb moisture and minerals directly from the surrounding. Most
algae are quite flattened, which maximizes the surface area for absorbing water, minerals,
and sunlight.
1) Mostly photosynthetic
6) Size ranges from size of bacteria (0.5 um) to over 50 m long (1 um = 1/25,000th
inch; 1 m = 39 inches)
2) Temperature needed:
The water must be in a temperature range that will support the specific
algal species being grown. Temperature vary with the species and strain cultured.
11
The optimal Temperature for phytoplankton cultures is generally between 20 and 30º
C. Temperatures lower than 16 º C slow down growth; Temperatures higher than 35 º
C are lethal for a number of species
Light must not be too strong nor too weak. In most algal-cultivation systems, light
only penetrates the top 3 inches (7.6 cm) to 4 inches (10 cm) of the water. This is
because as the algae grow and multiply, they become so dense that they block light
from reaching deeper into the pond or tank. Algae only need about 1/10th the amount
of light they receive from direct sunlight. Direct sunlight is often too strong for
algae.
Algae growers use various methods to agitate the water in their ponds which are 4
inches deeper or more, thus circulating the algae so that it does not remain on the
surface, which would cause it to be over-exposed. Paddle wheels can be used to
circulate (stir) the water in a pond. Compressed air can be introduced into the bottom
of a pond or tank to agitate the water, bringing algae from the lower levels up with it
as it makes its way to the surface.
12
Algal Chemical Composition:
Algae are made up of eukaryotic cells. These are cells with nuclei and organelles. All
algae all have plastids, the bodies with chlorophyll that carry out photosynthesis. But the various
lines of algae have different combinations of chlorophyll molecules. Some have only Chlorophyll
A, some A and B, while other lines, A and C. All algae primary comprise of the following, in
varying proportions: Proteins, Carbohydrates, Fats and Nucleic Acids. While the percentages
vary with the type of algae, there are algae types that are comprised up to 40% of their
overall mass by fatty acids. It is this fatty acid (oil) that can be extracted and converted
into biodiesel.
[4]
13
Chapter 4: Cultivation of Algae
Algae live on a high concentration of carbon dioxide-the Green house gas (GHG),
nitrogen dioxide (NO2)-a pollutant of power plants and diesel exhaust. These pollutants in
the atmosphere from the automobiles, cement plants, breweries, fertilizer plants, steel
14
plants are nutrients for the algae. Algae production facilities can thus be fed with the
exhaust gases from fossil fuels of these plants to significantly increase productivity and
clean up the air.
It is known that the biological method is considered the most effective and
economically efficient manner for the purification of industrial wastewater by using the
microbiological active slime and algae
Algae can be grown cheaply in Saltwater Ponds of the desert or even more
efficiently in proprietary photobioreactors (which solve a lot of the problems encountered
in open ponds for a few more dollars on the initial investment). It's conceivable that the
photobioreactors could be placed in a desert environment, although one of the challenges
for growing algae is to keep the water at a very consistent temperature of around 70
15
degrees Fahrenheit so that will likely also influence optimal placement of the
photobioreactors.
The primary inputs for growing algae are water, CO2, and sunlight. This
activity would be best accomplished closer to the desert, where seasonal sunlight levels
and temperatures don't vary as much as they do further away from the equator. Another
possible method to increase production would be to put the photobioreactors near a
conventional coal-burning electric plant and harvest the significant amounts of CO2
generated by the plant. As attractive as it sounds, the production of biodiesel shouldn't
depend on the coal plant operating indefinitely since that wouldn't be a sustainable long
term strategy. [5]
The most commonly used systems include shallow big ponds, tanks, circular ponds
and raceway ponds.
One of the major advantages of open ponds is that they are easier to construct and
operate than most closed systems.
However, major limitations in open ponds include poor light utilization by the
cells, evaporative losses, diffusion of CO2 to the atmosphere, and requirement of large
areas of land. Furthermore, contamination by predators and other fast growing
heterotrophs have restricted the commercial production of algae in open culture systems
to only those organisms that can grow under extreme conditions. Also, due to inefficient
stirring mechanisms in open cultivation systems, their mass transfer rates are very poor
resulting to low biomass productivity.
16
Raceway ponds:
The ponds in which the algae are cultivated are usually what are called the
“raceway ponds”. In these ponds, algae, water & nutrients circulate around a racetrack.
With paddlewheels providing the flow, algae are kept suspended in the water, and are
circulated back to the surface on a regular frequency. The ponds are usually kept shallow
because the algae need to be exposed to sunlight, and sunlight can only penetrate the
pond water to a limited depth. The ponds are operated in a continuous manner, with CO2
and nutrients being constantly fed to the ponds, while algae-containing water is removed
at the other end.
Source: http://students.chem.tue.nl/ifp23/interim_report/algae.html
Advantages:
The biggest advantage of these open ponds is their simplicity, resulting in low
production costs and low operating costs. While this is indeed the simplest of all the
17
growing techniques, it has some drawbacks owing to the fact that the environment in and
around the pond is not completely under control.
Bad weather can stunt algae growth. Contamination from strains of bacteria or
other outside organisms often results in undesirable species taking over the desired algal
growing in the pond. The water in which the algae grow also has to be kept at a certain
temperature, which can be difficult to maintain. Another drawback is the uneven light
intensity and distribution within the pond.
The NREL’s Aquatic Species Program (ASP) used open ponds for its
experiments and has also favored the same for the future primarily owing to its economic
value. However, many companies today are trying out with Closed Pond systems and in
many cases, with the much more expensive photobioreactors.[7]
Advantages and disadvantages of open and closed algae growth systems.
[8]
18
1) Micro algae (small)
Some marine algae are so small they can only be seen under a microscope. Others are
very large called macroalgae or seaweeds, such as Macrocystis, a species of kelp
belonging to the Brown Algae group, which may reach 60 meters in length.
Because of salt content, salt water is more economical than fresh water for
growing algae.
The main nutrients needed for algae growth is already present in seawater.
Seawater is a solution of salts of nearly constant composition, dissolved in variable
amounts of water. There are over 70 elements dissolved in seawater but only 6 make
up>99% of all the dissolved salts; all occur as ions - electrically charged atoms or groups
of atoms:
Composition of Seawater
Chloride(Cl) 55.04 wt%
Sulphate(SO4) 7.68 wt%
Calcium(Ca) 1.16 wt%
Sodium(Na) 30.61 wt%
Magnesium(Mg) 3.69 wt%
Potassium(K) 1.10 wt%
Source: http://imtuoradea.ro/auo.fmte/files-
2007/MECANICA_files/badea_gabriela_1.pdf
Macro-algae are cultivated at sea mainly by simply tying them to anchored floating lines.
Seaweeds do not require soil, and are already provided with all the water they need, a
major advantage over land production of biofuels since water is the most limiting
factor for most agricultural expansion, especially with climate change. The sea water
containing the algae must be cleaned or unwanted types of algae and other
contaminants, which may feed or compete with algae, will grow in the culture.[9]
19
In most cases, it is unnecessary to separate micro-algae from the culture fluid.
Excess and off-season production may, however, be concentrated and preserved.
Concentrated:
Recovery:
Freezing:
In the first case it is necessary to cut the algai that slightly raises the energy
consumption. With free floating algae, harvesting can be made by simply raising a net
installed in the pond, with a large energy saving with respect to micro-algae, which need
filtration for their separation.
20
Previously, the only way to collect the seaweeds was to pick them one by one
from the nets, a cold, tedious, and slow job. Today, petrol-driven rotary cutters are used
which resemble an inverted lawnmower in construction. One or two men pull the nets
over the cutter while another manages the boat. The harvesters tie and untie the nets as
they pass. The process can be adjusted so as to select only the larger fronds and within a
fortnight the remaining fronds and frond stumps will have grown sufficiently to allow a
further crop to be cut. As a rule, nets are harvested 3-4 times but the crop gets
progressively smaller each time. At the end of the harvesting season, the nets are
carefully cleaned with freshwater, dried and stored for the next season. Some harvesters
use another type of mowing machine with a vacuum pump incorporated to collect the cut
plants.[11]
21
Figure 1
http://www.filthylucre.com/algae-biofuel
22
Figure 2
http://www.trademe.co.nz/Business-farming-industry/Farming-
forestry/Livestock/Other/auction-254498286.htm
23
not taken, continuous bioreactors often collapse very quickly, however once they
are successfully started, they can continue operating for long periods. An
advantage of this type of algae culture is that an alga in the “log phase” is
produced which is generally of higher nutrient content than old
"senescent" algae.
It can be shown that the maximum productivity for a bioreactor occurs when the
"exchange rate" (time to exchange one volume of liquid) is equal to the
"doubling time" (in mass or volume) of the algae.
Algal culture systems can be done by artificial light, solar light or by both. Naturally
illuminated Algal Culture systems with large illumination surface areas include
open ponds, flat-plate, horizontal/serpentine tubular airlift, and inclined
tubular photobioreactors .Generally, laboratory-scale photobioreactors are
artificially illuminated (either internally or externally) using fluorescent lamps
or other light distributors. Some of these photobioreactors include bubble
column, airlift column, stirred-tank, helical tubular, conical, torus, and seaweed
type photobioreactors.
Furthermore, some photobioreactors can be easily tempered. Tempering could
simply be achieved by placing a Photobioreactor in a constant temperature
room. This approach is limited to compact photobioreactors. Large-scale
outdoor systems such as Tubular Photobioreactors cannot be easily tempered
without high technical efforts. However, several commercially available
photobioreactors, for example, BIOSTAT photobioreactors (developed by
Sartorius BBI Systems Inc.) can be readily tempered. Also, some efforts were
undertaken to design temperature-controlled photobioreactors, such as double-
walled internally- illuminated photobioreactor with a heating and cooling water
circuit.
Algal-oil is very high in unsaturated fatty acids. Some UFA's found in different algal-
species include:
24
• Arachidonic acid(AA)
• Eicospentaenoic acid(EPA)
• Docasahexaenoic acid(DHA)
• Gamma-linolenic acid(GLA)
• Linoleic acid(LA)
The interest in algal oil is not new, though the widespread interest in making Biodiesel
from algal oil is more recent. Algae oil has been produced and used for the cosmetic
industry, primarily from macroalgae (larger sized algae) such as oarleaf Seaweed etc.
Most current research on oil extraction from algae is however focused on microalgae.[8]
25
Chapter 5: Types of Photobioreactors
1) Tubular Reactors
a. Horizontal
b. Vertical
2) Flat Panel Rectors
3) Vertical column reactors
4) Bubble column reactors
5) Air lift reactors
6) Stirred Tank Photobioreactors
7) Immobilized Bioreactors
Subsystems in PBR
A Photobioreactor maximizes the growth conditions through its design: the use of clear
plastic tubing for efficient and volumetric distribution of light; efficient delivery of light
from the source to the algae; air lift pumps to keep the algae in suspension; mechanism
for CO2 and O2 exchange; pH and growth sensors.
PBRs are complex systems composed of several subsystems. The key systems are:
26
1. Light source
2. Optical transmission system
3. Air Handling System
3. Reaction area – the reaction mixing system
4. Gas exchange system
5. Nutrient System
6. Filtration System (to remove algal biomass)
7. Sensing System
8. Electrical Systems
9. Instrumentation Systems
27
5.1 Tubular photobioreactors :
Construction:
Limitation:
.
Tubular photobioreactors consist of straight, coiled or looped transparent tubing
arranged in various ways for maximizing sunlight capture. Properly designed
tubular photobioreactors completely isolate the culture from potentially contaminating
28
external environments, hence, allowing extended duration monoalgal culture.
The increase in pH of the cultures would also lead to frequent re-carbonation of the
cultures, which would consequently increase the cost of algal production.
Prospects
Large illumination surface area, suitable for outdoor cultures, fairly good biomass
productivities, relatively cheap.
Limitations
Gradients of pH, dissolved oxygen and CO2 along the tubes, fouling, some degree of
wall growth, requires large land space [12]
29
figure 3
Figure 3
http://phytobloom.com/bilder/tubos81.jpg
Figure 4
30
5.2 Flat-plate photobioreactors :
Limitations
Scale-up require many compartments and support materials, difficulty in controlling
culture temperature, some degree of wall growth, possibility of hydrodynamic stress to
some algal strains.[10]
31
Figure 5
http://images.google.co.in/imgres?
imgurl=http://www.spirulinasource.com/imagese/C622Bioreactors.gif&imgrefurl=htt
p://www.spirulinasource.com/earthfoodch6c.html&usg=__DIJK9tcw6mbzpD6oANo
249eQmes=&h=182&w=504&sz=27&hl=en&start=6&tbnid=SYjnLqw4bXBu7M:&
tbnh=47&tbnw=130&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dflate%2Bplate%2Bphotobioreactor
%26gbv%3D2%26hl%3Den%26safe%3Dactive%26sa%3DG
32
5.3 Vertical-column photobioreactors :
Various designs and scales of vertical-column photobioreactors have been tested for
cultivation of algae. Vertical-column photobioreactors are compact, low-cost, and easy to
operate monoseptically. Furthermore, they are very promising for large-scale cultivation
of algae. It was reported that bubble-column and airlift photobioreactors (up to 0.19 m in
diameter) can attain a final biomass concentration and specific growth rate that are
comparable to values typically reported for narrow tubular photobioreactors. Some
bubble column photobioreactors are equipped with either draft tubes or constructed as
split cylinders. In the case of draft tube photobioreactors, intermixing occurs between the
riser and the downcomer zones of the photobioreactor through the walls of the draft tube.
Prospects
High mass transfer, good mixing with low shear stress, low energy consumption, high
potentials for scalability, easy to sterilize, readily tempered, good for immobilization of
algae, reduced photoinhibition and photo-oxidation.
Limitations
Small illumination surface area, their construction requires sophisticated materials, shear
stress to algal cultures, decrease of illumination surface area upon scale-up.
33
Figure 6
Green wall panel photo bioreactor (picture courtesy of E. Molina grima , university of
almeria ,spain )
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?
_ob=MiamiCaptionURL&_method=retrieve&_udi=B6VRV-4WGD7C6-
1&_image=fig1&_ba=1&_user=1562135&_rdoc=1&_fmt=full&_orig=search&_cdi=624
4&view=c&_acct=C000053724&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=1562135&md5=
1dcdb5bb93ce16cc4ed4fdadfad3fc73
Solix’s photobioreactor :
34
Figure 7
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?
_ob=MiamiCaptionURL&_method=retrieve&_udi=B6VRV-4WGD7C6-
1&_image=fig2&_ba=2&_user=1562135&_rdoc=1&_fmt=full&_orig=search&_cdi=624
4&view=c&_acct=C000053724&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=1562135&md5=
4c4d1d23b32389f5ad9590ec52ea2c3c
Biodiesel is the most commonly discussed energy output from algae, but it is not the only one. A serious
study of the energy domain and of algae points to a wide basket of energy outputs that can be theoretically
derived from algae – all the way from gasoline to hydrogen to LPG. The following is the list of fuels that
can be obtained from algae.
1) Biodiesel
2) Ethanol
3) Hydrogen
35
4) Methane
5) Biomass
Where algae biomass is directly used for combustion other hydrocarbon fuel variants, such as JP-8
fuel, gasoline, biobutanol etc.
In order to derive the various energy products from algae, the Algal Biomass needs to be put
through different processes.
Fuel source
• Algae can be used to make Biodiesel, Bioethanol and biobutanol and by some
estimates can produce vastly superior amounts of vegetable oil, compared to
terrestrial crops grown for the same purpose.
• Algae can be grown to produce hydrogen. In 1939 a German researcher named
Hans Gaffron, while working at the University of Chicago, observed that the
algae he was studying, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (a green-algae), would
sometimes switch from the production of oxygen to the production of hydrogen.
36
• Algae can be grown to produce biomass, which can be burned to produce heat and
electricity.
Food supplement:
1. It is a complete protein with essential amino acids (unlike most plant foods) that are
involved in major metabolic processes such as energy and enzyme production.
2. It contains high amounts of simple and complex carbohydrates which provide the body
with a source of additional fuel. In particular, the sulfated complex carbohydrates are
thought to enhance the immune system’s regulatory response.
3. It contains an extensive fatty acid profile, including Omega 3 and Omega 6. These
essential fatty acids also play a key role in the production of energy.
Stabilizing agent
Chondrus crispus, (probably confused with Mastocarpus stellatus, common name: Irish
moss), is also used as "carrageen". It is an excellent stabiliser in milk products - it reacts
with the milk protein caesin, other products include: petfoods, toothpaste, ice-creams and
lotions etc., Alginates in creams and lotions are absorbable through the skin.
Fertilizer
Algae are used by humans in many ways. They are used as fertilizers, soil conditioners
and are a source of livestock feed. Because many species are aquatic and microscopic,
they are cultured in clear tanks or ponds and either harvested or used to treat effluents
pumped through the ponds
37
Role of Algae in Pollution control
1) Algae are used in Wastewater Treatment facilities, reducing the need for greater
amounts of toxic chemicals than are already used.
2) Algae can be used to capture fertilizers in runoff from farms. When subsequently
harvested, the enriched algae itself can be used as fertilizer.
3) Algae Bioreactors are used by some power plants to reduce CO2 emissions. The
CO2 can be pumped into a pond, or some kind of tank, on which the algae feed.
Alternatively, the Bioreactor can be installed directly on top of a smokestack.
A new species of algae found living in coral in Sydney Harbour can be used to improve
malaria treatments, scientists say.
Wastewater :
A possible nutrient source is waste water from the treatment of sewage, agricultural, or
flood plain run-off, all currently major pollutants and health risks. However, this waste
water cannot feed algae directly and must first be processed by bacteria,
through anaerobic digestion. If waste water is not processed before it reaches the algae, it
will contaminate the algae in the reactor, and at the very least, kill much of the desired
algae strain. In biogas facilities, organic waste is often converted to a mixture of carbon
dioxide, methane, and organic fertilizer. Organic fertilizer that comes out of digester is
liquid, and nearly suitable for algae growth, but it must first be cleaned and sterilized.
The utilization of wastewater and ocean water instead of freshwater is strongly advocated
due to the continuing depletion of freshwater resources. However, heavy metals, trace
metals, and other contaminants in wastewater can decrease the ability of cells to produce
lipids biosynthetically and also impact various other workings in the machinery of cells.
The same is true for ocean water, but the contaminants are found in different
concentrations. Thus, agricultural-grade fertilizer is the preferred source of nutrients, but
heavy metals are again a problem, especially for strains of algae that are susceptible to
these metals. In open pond systems the use of strains of algae that can deal with high
38
concentrations of heavy metals could prevent other organisms from infesting these
systems (Schenk et al. 2008).
These algae when squeezed give algae oil. This algae oil play significant role
nowadays.this algae can be used for production of biodisel which extracted from the
seeds and plant .this algae oil can be extracted by two process
By Physical Methods
By Chemical Methods
Algae Oil :
Fundamentally, algal oil is similar to oil from traditional oil crops / oilseeds. Fixed oils
from seeds, nuts & vegetables are typically composed of triglyceride molecules (also
known as triacylglycerol or triacylglyceride). A triglyceride is a glyceride in which the
glycerol is esterified with three fatty acids - a triglyceride is typically composed of a 3-
carbon alcohol (glycerol) plus three 18-carbon (or 16-carbon) fatty acids. The 18-carbon
fatty acids are Linoleic acid (CH3(CH2)4CH=CHCH2CH=CH(CH2)7COOH), Stearic acid
(CH3(CH2)16COOH.)& Oleic acid(CH3(CH2)7CH=CH(CH2)7COOH)).
39
Triglyceride formula : RCOO-CH2CH(-OOCR')CH2-OOCR"
R'COO
The fatty acids may be saturated (with all single bonds), mono-unsaturated (with one
double bond) or polyunsaturated (with 2 or more double bonds). Plant fatty acids are
usually unsaturated and liquid at room temperature, with one or more double bonds
between the carbon atoms (mono-unsaturated and polyunsaturated). A notable exception
is the palm fatty acid – palmitin – which is saturated and contains 16 rather than 18
carbon atoms. Since the plant fatty acids are unsaturated, the plant oils it is liquid at room
temperature.
1) Expression/Expeller press:
2) Ultrasonic-assisted extraction:
40
The simplest method is mechanical crushing. Since different strains of algae
vary widely in their physical attributes, various press configurations (screw, expeller,
piston, etc) work better for specific algae types. Often, mechanical crushing is used in
conjunction with chemicals.
Expression/Expeller press:
Algae is dried it retains its oil content, which then can be "pressed" out
with an oil press. Since different strains of algae vary widely in their physical
attributes, various press configurations (screw, expeller, piston, etc) work better for
specific algae types. Many commercial manufacturers of vegetable oil use a
combination of mechanical pressing and Chemical Solvents in extracting oil.
Ultrasonic-assisted extraction:
Ultrasonic extraction, a branch of sonochemistry, can greatly accelerate
extraction processes. Using an ultrasonic reactor, ultrasonic waves are used to create
cavitation bubbles in a solvent material, when these bubbles collapse near the cell
walls, it creates shock waves and liquid jets that cause those cells walls to break and
release their contents into the solvent.
i) Benzene and
ii) Ether
Oil can also be separated by hexane extraction, which is widely used in the
food industry and is relatively inexpensive. The downsides to using solvents for oil
extraction are the dangers involved in working with the chemicals. Care must be taken to
avoid exposure to vapors and direct contact with the skin, either of which can cause
serious damage. Benzene is classified as a carcinogen. Chemical Solvents also present the
41
problem of being an explosion hazard.
Soxhlet extraction :
Soxhlet extraction is an extraction method that uses chemical solvents. Oils
from the algae are extracted through repeated washing, or percolation, with an
organic solvent such as hexane or petroleum ether, under reflux in special glassware.
42
The major problem associated with the use of pure vegetable oils as well as oil
from algae as fuels for diesel engines is caused by high fuel viscosity in compression
ignition. Algal oil, as well as vegetable oils, are all highly viscous, with viscosities
ranging 10–20 times those of no. 2 Diesel fuel. Amongst vegetable oils in the context
of viscosity, castor oil is in a class by itself, with a viscosity more than 100 times that
of no. 2 Diesel fuel (MSDS of No.2 Diesel Fuel – PetroCard). Due to their high
viscosity and low volatility, they do not burn completely and form deposits in the
fuel injector of diesel engines. Furthermore, acrolein (a highly toxic substance) is
formed through thermal decomposition of glycerol.
The four techniques applied to solve the problems encountered with the high fuel
viscosity.
1) Dilution,
2) Micro-emulsification,
3) Pyrolysis and
4) Transesterification
Amongst the four techniques, chemical conversion of the oil to its corresponding fatty
ester is the most promising solution to the high viscosity problem. This process -
chemical conversion of the oil to its corresponding fatty ester, and thus Biodiesel - is
called transesterification.
Other than transesterification, the other methods that have been considered to reduce the
high viscosity of vegetable oils/algal oil are:
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3) Thermal decomposition, which produces alkanes, alkenes, carboxylic acids and
aromatic compounds
However, when compared with the above, the transesterification process appears
to be the best choice, as the physical characteristics of fatty acid esters (biodiesel) are
very close to those of diesel fuel, and the process is relatively simple. Furthermore, the
methyl or ethyl esters of fatty acids can be burned directly in unmodified diesel engines,
with very low deposit
The Biodiesel from algae in itself is not significantly different from biodiesel produced
from vegetable/plant oils. All biodiesel essentially are produced using triglycerides
(commonly called fats) from the plant/algal oils. Some differences could exist, though:
• The most significant different is is however in the yield of algal oil, and hence
biodiesel. According to some estimates, the yield (per Acre say) of oil from algae
is over 200 times the yield from the best-performing plant/vegetable oils.
2) Algae can grow practically in every place where there is enough sunshine
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3) The biodiesel production from algae also has the beneficial by-product of
reducing carbon and NOx Emissions from power plants, if the algae are grown
using exhausts from
In the quest for Fuel from the algae we sometimes forget that algae are also
useful as other means once the oil has been extracted. Currently in public circulation is
the fact that algae grown for fuel have characteristics of Carbon 17 through 19
designations for the higher Btu capable energy density values. When you look over the
complete course of available algae you also find strains that produce less energy density
with lower carbon chains such as the Carbon 13 or 14 area. This lower carbon density is
used for surfactant's or soap. I have had a conference call with a large soap manufacturer
looking to acquire algae strains that can come from CO2 emitted from there one site
power developed by there furnace to grow algae containing these chemical requirements.
It may seem odd but there is even more development in areas of using the remaining
leftovers of the oil extracted leftovers from algae.
Once the Oil is removed the proteins of the algae can be dried and separated or remain
intact to be added back into the feedstock of biomass power plants. The amount would be
very minimal. But the idea is proven.
Proteins are currently being used in Dairy Section products for protein boosts when the
original product has insufficient quantity to garner the quality the manufacturer is looking
for.
Proteins are also capable of being turned into paper by milling the residual leftovers into
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something pliable and useful enough to write on.
Proteins are also convertible into Fuel Pellets that can be burnt in home pellet stoves.
Carbohydrates leftover from the due process of the algae can be converted into complex
and simple sugars depending on the strain. Therefore making the algae a potential to feed
the ethanol industry with another source. Sugar replacement in our human food
supplements is also a solution not recognized due to the overabundance of the Cane
Sugar, beet sugar, and other currently produced sugar for human consumption.
Microalgae contain lipids and fatty acids as membrane components, storage products, metabolites
and sources of energy. Algal strains, diatoms, and cyanobacteria (categorized collectively as
"Microalgae") have been found to contain proportionally high levels of lipids (over 30%). These
microalgal strains with high oil, or lipid content are of great interest in the search for a sustainable
feedstock for the production of biodiesel. As could be seen from Table 1, algae contain anywhere
between 2% and 40% of lipids/oils by weight.
Comparison of average oil yields from algae with that from other oilseeds
The table below presents indicative oil yields from various oilseeds and algae. Please
note that there are significant variations in yields even within an individual oilseed
depending on where it is grown, the specific variety/grade of the plant etc. Similarly, for
algae there are significant variations between oil yields from different strains of algae.
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The data presented below are indicative in nature, primarily to highlight the order-of-
magnitude differences present in the oil yields from algae when compared with other
oilseeds. ( see also: Vegetable Oils Yields & Characteristics – from Journey to Forever)
Castor 1413
Sunflower 952
Safflower 779
Palm 5950
Soy 446
Coconut 2689
Algae 100000
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is: which is the best species of algae for biodiesel? The decades-long research
undertaken by NREL of USA – called the Aquatic Species Program– did in-depth
research on this topic and in the end has said that there is no one strain or species of
algae that can be said to be the best in terms of oil yield for biodiesel. However they
did conclude that the diatoms and secondly green algae were the most promising.
Production in India :
Kolkata : The Sundarbans delta, an archipelago of some 100 islands spread over 4,262 sq.
km. on the Indian side of the Bay of Bengal, is becoming the incubator of ecology-
friendly energy sources...
A new chapter will open if the efforts to try out algae cultivation in order to extract bio-
diesel reaches fruition, in this remote deltaic marshland which is the world’s largest
mangrove swamp. ....A Chennai-based company, Bio Max, is keen on setting up an algae
cultivation project, on one of the uninhabited Sundarbans islands.
Bengal is taking the lead in algae fuel — a third-generation biofuel that has generated
tremendous excitement worldwide. A city-based organization is conducting a pilot
project at the Kolaghat thermal power plant and is expected to start production in 2010.
What’s unique about this first-of-its-kind project in India is that the technology will
eventually not only lead to a cleaner automobile fleet across the country but also help
power plants reduce their carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emission. “Algae yields a very high
amount of bio-fuel compared with jatropha or soyabean because almost the entire algal
organism uses sunlight to produce lipids or oil. Studies show that algae can produce 60-
80% of their biomass in the form of oil,” said professor Sarajit Basu, the mentor of the
project and an expert on bio-fuel. Algae fuel leaves no carbon residue. Up to 99% of CO
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2 in solution can be converted, which is returned to the air when the bio-fuel is burnt.
This can help reduce polluting units’ carbon footprint. “The algae technology can be
integrated with a power plant or a sponge iron factory where CO 2 emission is very high.
“The possibilities are immense. Fifty per cent of the CO 2 emitted can be used for algal
farming, 25% for farming of spirulina (an edible algae, very high in protein content), and
the rest can be compressed in its uncontaminated form to produce dry ice. The oilcakes
again are an excellent fuel which can be burnt to generate power to run this entire
process. So, it will be a selfsustaining technology,” said S M Ghosh, the head of Bio-Fuel
Mission of Sun Plant Agro, which plans to start commercial production of algae bio-fuel
by 2010. “We are taking land on lease near Canning for this,” said A K Singh, managing
director of Sun Plant Agro. Both West Bengal Power Development Corporation
(WBPDCL) and Sun Plant Agro will earn carbon credit for the algae project. “Algae can
be the fuel of the future. It can produce nearly 300 times more oil per acre than soybean
or jatropha, and has a short harvesting cycle, thereby lowering the production cost,” said
Sunil Jha, chief manager (projects) of Sun Plant Agro. “What’s better, we can use
wasteland for algal farming as algae can grow in arid and saline conditions. They can be
grown in oceans, freshwater ponds or even wastewater, minimizing land acquisition
issues and expenses. Moreover, they can grow 20 to 30 times faster than food crops.
Regional production of microalgae and processing into biofuels will provide economic
benefits to rural communities,” said Dr Basu.
ADVANTAGES:
Algae can produce up to 80% of their biomass in the form of oil, yielding up to 100,000
gallons of oil per acre per year
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They have much faster growth rates than other crops
Algae can produce 100-300 times more oil per acre than conventional crops, such as
jatropha, rapeseed, palms or soybeans and they have a harvesting cycle of 1-10 days,
which permits several harvests in a very short time frame
Algae can also be grown on arid land, excessively saline soil or even droughtstricken
land. During photosynthesis, algae capture carbon dioxide and sunlight and convert it into
oxygen and biomass. Up to 99% of CO 2 in solution can be converted, which is returned
to the air when the bio-fuel is burnt.
Moreover, by cutting down use of fossil fuel, it will return the balance of CO 2 .
Besides replacing petrol/diesel, algal oil can be the future of air travel as well. On
January 8, 2009, Continental Airlines ran the world’s first algae-fueled test flight with a
50/50 blend of biofuel and ATF
http://20twentytwo.blogspot.com/2009/08/algae-as-fuel.html
Myanmar: In 1988, commercial harvest began on several alkaline volcanic lakes that
enjoy natural blooms of spirulina. By 1993, 30 tons per year was being harvested and
sold on the local market. By 1999 production increased to 100 tons per year.
Four volcanic lakes with natural spirulina blooms were studied beginning in 1984.
Production began at Twin Taung Lake in 1988, and by 1999 increased to 100 tons per
year. About 60% is harvested from boats on the surface of the lake, and about 40% is
grown in outdoor ponds alongside the lake. During the blooming season in the summer,
when spirulina forms thick mats on the lake, people in boats collect a dense concentration
of spirulina in buckets.
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Spirulina is harvested on parallel inclined filters, washed with fresh water, detwatered
and pressed again. This paste is extruded into noodle like filaments which are dried in the
sun on transparent plastic sheets. Dried chips are taken to a pharmaceutical factory in
Yangon, pasteurized, and pressed into tablets.
http://www.spirulinasource.com/earthfoodch8b.html#myanmar
http://www.ifeed.org/links/Transportation2007-12.pdf
Chapter articles :
Deriving energy from algae is considered the Holy Grail of alternative energy. Algae
present the best option for producing biodiesel in quantities sufficient to completely
replace petroleum. Algae can yield 5,000-20,000 gallons per acre per year against
traditional crops which can yield only about 50-150 gallons of biodiesel per acre per year,
as more evidence comes out daily from the leaders of petroleum producing countries, the
incentive for finding an alternative to petroleum rises higher and higher.
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Use seaweed as fuel :
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Source : A Californian kelp forest
The dream of tackling climate change with biofuels has been tarnished by the rush to
produce them on land. Not only are there serious environmental costs, including
deforestation, water use, production of greenhouse gases, and energy-efficiency
limitations, but there are also rising concerns about the effects on the world's poor.
Already the price of food is being driven up as land is taken away from food production,
increasing the cost of food and nutrition for those who can least afford it.
It is curious then that, bar a brief mention in a recent paper on sustainable biofuels by the
London-based Royal Society, the potential for biomass production at sea is largely
ignored.
The oceans are the largest active carbon sink on the planet, covering more than 70 per
cent of its surface area, and are predicted to grow as sea levels rise. Our seas also receive
a larger proportion of the world's sunshine than land does, particularly in the tropical and
subtropical belt where land is scarcer.
To agriculturalists, the oceans are vast and grossly underused fields well provided with
sunlight and water.
Despite this, the full potential for sea cultivation (mariculture) has only recently been
recognised. The 'blue revolution' of freshwater aquaculture and mariculture is growing
exponentially.
Statistics from the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization show mariculture is strongest
in Asia and the Pacific. While aquaculture production has risen sixty-fold since the early
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1950s (to 59.4 million tonnes in 2004) and is worth around US$70 billion (A$74 billion),
91.5 per cent of this was produced in Asia and the Pacific.
Similarly, 99.8 per cent of the eight million or so tonnes of seaweed produced each year,
with a market of nearly US$6 billion, come from Asia and the Pacific, primarily China,
Japan and Korea.
Until now, seaweed has been valued mainly as food, but also as fertiliser, animal feed,
and recently for a growing phycocolloid industry producing algin, agar and carrageenan.
But it could also be a major fuel.
Macro-algae (seaweeds) are cultivated at sea, mainly by simply tying them to anchored
floating lines. Seaweeds do not require soil, and are already provided with all the water
they need, a major advantage over land production of biofuels since water is the most
limiting factor for most agricultural expansion, especially with climate change.
One concern is that harvesting massive amounts of naturally occurring seaweed for
bioenergy could have comparable effects on atmospheric carbon dioxide and habitat loss
or fragmentation as large-scale deforestation. But cultivation is a different matter.
In Costa Rica and Japan, seaweed farming has been re-established to produce energy. It
can quickly yield large amounts of carbon-neutral biomass, which can be burnt to
generate electricity. High-value compounds — including some for other biofuels — can
be extracted beforehand.
We have calculated that less than three per cent of the world's oceans — that's about 20
per cent of the land area currently used in agriculture — would be needed to fully
substitute for fossil fuels. A small fraction of that sea area would be enough to fully
substitute for biofuel production on land.
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As with land-produced biofuels, the contribution to carbon dioxide reduction would come
from cutting net carbon dioxide additions via equivalent decreases in fossil fuel
combustion. This happens because biofuels — fuels derived from recent photosynthesis
— are basically carbon neutral because all carbon released by burning has recently been
taken from the atmosphere.
In contrast, fossil fuels come from ancient photosynthesis, thus the carbon released by
burning had been stored for ages and thus represents a net addition into the atmosphere.
The main input needed for the large-scale farming this would require is nutrients, because
large quantities of them will be removed at harvest. Common agricultural fertilisation —
costly and energy consuming — could add large amounts of nutrients to the oceans, with
unknown results.
But there is a great and grossly misused nutritional source on hand: domestic wastewaters
or the product after their treatment.
Growing large seaweed fields for energy using nutrients from wastewater could be an
economically-sound use for the millions of tonnes of untreated wastewater dumped daily
into our seas worldwide, and the seaweed helps clean it up in the process.
This idea has been tested successfully using human wastewater in experiments at U.S.
institutions, including the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and the Harbour
Branch Oceanographic Institution.
As with agriculture, considering that seaweed production is economical for food and
other products, it follows that at least some of the options should also be economical for
biofuels and bioenergy. However, the analogy with agriculture does not stop there, and a
careless farming of the seas could be as damaging as careless agriculture.
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But the greatest spin-off from switching biofuels production to the oceans would be the
return of land to food production, making food and nutrition more easily available to the
world's poor.
http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/node/2040/full
Thus.
Biofuel from seed is common nowadays , but for production of the biofuel we require fertile land
and fresh water and most important time is also require for growing plants .
That’s why we are taking the marine environment to cultivate algae it has all contents which are
land and water .this large is just useless for us if we are extracting oil from this environment then
it is beneficial for us use that land for other purpose like for agricultural purpose because as we
can see prices of food is increasing rapidly .
Algae take very less time for growth and is easiest way for production of biodisel
Ethanol is a great example of a biofuel “solution” that may be creating more harm than good.
Ethanol, produced naturally from fermentation by yeasts and other microorganisms, is subsidized
heavily by the federal government. Currently in the United States, corn grain is the main
feedstock for ethanol production. American taxpayers are billed heavily to subsidize the country’s
privately owned ethanol plants. When a large amount of ethanol is produced from corn this
creates problems.
Corn is a primary source of livestock feed, and feedlot owners have seen their costs rise
dramatically because of ethanol production and these costs are passed on to consumers.
Also, these crops are not sustainable. They are grown on fertile land and when crops are
harvested, the nutrients are removed and not replaced through the natural process of
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recycling dead plants back into the land to provide nutrients for the next cycle. Water is a
precious resource and Ethanol production uses large amounts of it. This could increase
the water shortage worldwide, which is already occurring in some arid countries,
including a drought in the southeast United States. Another problem is that farm
machinery and vehicles burn fossil fuels to harvest and transport the crops. This process
contributes considerable amounts of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.
According to a 2005 Cornell University and UC Berkeley study, they found that turning
plants such as corn, soybeans and sunflowers into fuel uses much more energy than the
resulting ethanol or biodiesel generates. In fact, their data found that in terms of energy
output compared with energy input for ethanol production, corn requires 29 percent more
fossil energy than fuel produced.
Biodiesel developed from vegetable oil is a more economical and environmental solution.
The oil is extracted from a variety of crops, including soybean, rapeseed and palm oil.
However, these sources have significant problems as well. They also require arable land
use, which displaces food crops, and are not the most productive or efficient source of
vegetable oil. According to the same 2005 study, in terms of energy output compared
with the energy input for biodiesel production; soybean plants requires 27 percent more
fossil energy than the fuel produced, and sunflower plants requires 118 percent more
fossil energy than the fuel produced. The following chart illustrates the vegetable oil
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yield for some of the most common biofuel sources.
However there is hope on the horizon coming from an unlikely hero, algae. Exploration
of algae as a potent biofuel is exploding. Many companies and Universities are
researching various methods and strains of algae to solve the world’s fossil fuel
dependency problem. It is estimated that algae cultivated in open ponds could yield about
10,000 gallons of oil per acre. It is considered a “carbon neutral”? fuel because algae
requires CO2 gas to grow. 90% by weight of the algae is captured carbon dioxide and as
it grows it releases oxygen into the air, but the CO2 gas does finally get released when
the fuel is use. For about 15 years up to 1996, the U.S. government took an active roll
researching algae’s potential, but continually ran into problems. Open ponds used a lot of
water; it was difficult to keep contaminants out of the ponds; and the overall costs versus
the amount of oil collected compared to the price for fossil fuels just didn’t add up.
However with the current price of crude oil reaching more than $100 a barrel on the stock
market; the realization that within 50 years the planet’s supply of petroleum will be
exhausted; and the rising interest in environmental causes; algae is getting a second look.
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Recently in the news, Virgin Atlantic became the first airline to fly with biofuel. On
Sunday February 24, 2008, a Boeing 747-400 flew from London to Amsterdam with a
20% mixture of biofuel derived from coconut and babassu oil in one of its four tanks.
Richard Branson said, “the historic flight marks the first step toward reducing the airline
industry’s carbon footprint.” Branson and Boeing don’t think that using coconut or
babassu oil is a realistic option for regular commercial use for the transportation industry
because the quantity needed would deplete arable land, contribute to deforestation and
drive up food costs. This is why they are spending “lot of time and money investigating
algal fuels because commercial fuel will almost certainly be derived from algae.”
Also in the news, at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival a Mercedes Benz C320 diesel
demonstrated the “first real-world road test of biodiesel made from algae”, developed by
Solazyme, a California Biotech firm. Solazyme is featured in the Josh Tickell’s film
“Fields of Fuel,” a documentary about renewable fuel. Algae is considered a promising
source of fuel because many species contain high amounts of oil that can be extracted,
processed and refined into fuel. They also are abundant and grow quickly, feeding on
carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen.
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Probably the most exciting research with algae is being carried out by scientist Glen
Kertz in El Paso, Texas with Vertigo. Algae is grown inside of high-density bioreactors
constructed from plastic sheeting inside of a greenhouse. Flow paths formed within the
plastic sheeting allow water and algae to constantly circulate through the system. Algae
can reproduce six times in a 24 hour period, so it grows very quickly and is constantly
being syphoned off. The algae is then refined and the oil is extracted, but nothing is
wasted. The benefits to Vertigro are numerous. First, since the plastic sheeting is hung
vertically, 100,000- 200,000 gallons of oil per acre can be produced. Second, the
greenhouses can be placed on non-arable land as long as it receives plenty of sunlight, so
deserts are a perfect location. Third, it uses a minimal amount of water because it cycles
the water through a closed circuit system. Forth, the biomass that remains after the oil is
extracted can be used in various ways. Lastly, with Vertigro, there is no need for heavy
farm equipment that pollutes the air to harvest the algae. The algae is easily collected in
receptacles.
In an interview with Scott Fulbright, a recent graduate from Michigan State University
and research assistant with Valcent, he was able to answer some questions regarding the
Vertigro project.(Elizabeth Rathgeber , http://www.filthylucre.com/algae-biofuel)
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References :
[1] http://www.oilgae.com/algae/sources/sources.html
[2] http://www.oilgae.com/algae/cla/hab/hab.html
[3] http://www.oilgae.com/algae/ap/ap.html
[4] http://www.oilgae.com/algae/comp/comp.html
[5, 6,7,8] David M. Wogan ,Algae: Pond Powered Biofuels ,ati cleanergy incubator ,university
of texas at Austin, November 19, 2008
[8] E. Molina Grima, F.G.A.F., F. Garcıa Camacho, F. Camacho Rubio, Y. Chisti, Scale-
up of tubular photobioreactors. Journal of Applied Phycology, 2000. 12(355-
368).
Otto Pulz, K.S., Photobioreactors: production systems for phototrophic microorganisms.
Appl Microbiol Biotechnol, 2001. 57: p. 287-293
[9]
http://courseware.ee.calpoly.edu/~jharris/courses/563s05/Group1_Algae_and_Biodiesel.p
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