Bioresources and Bioprocessing, Volume (10), No (1), Year (2023-7)

Title : ( Sequential extraction of value-added bioproducts from three Chlorella strains using a drying-based combined disruption technique )

Authors: zahra izanlou , Mahmood Akhavan Mahdavi , Reza Gheshlaghi , Arash Karimian ,

Citation: BibTeX | EndNote

Abstract

In this study, the sequential extraction of the three types of biochemicals from microalgae is employed, which is a more realistic and practical solution for large-scale extraction of bioproducts. The drying, grinding, organic solvent treatment, and ultra-sonication were combined to disrupt cells and sequentially extract bioproducts from three microalgae strains, Chlorella sorokiniana IG-W-96, Chlorella sp. PG-96, and Chlorella vulgaris IG-R-96. As the drying is the most energy-intensive step in cell disruption and sequential extraction, the effect of this step on sequential extraction deeply explored. The results show that total ash-plus contents of biochemicals in freeze-dried samples (95.4±2.8%, 89.3±3.9%, and 77.5±4.2 respectively) are higher than those in oven-dried samples (91.0±2.8%, 89.5±3.0%, 71.4±4.8%, respectively) showing the superiority of freeze drying over oven drying merely for Chlorella vulgaris IG-R-96 (p-value=0.003) and non-significant variation for Chlorella sorokiniana IG-W-96 (p-value=0.085) and Chlorella sp. PG-96 (p-value=0.466). Variation among biochemical contents of strains is due to the difference in cell wall strength confirmed by TEM imaging. The freeze-dried samples achieved higher lipid yields than oven-dried samples. The total carbohydrate yields followed the same pattern. The extraction yields of total protein were higher in freeze-dried samples than in oven-dried. Total mass balance revealed that drying-based sequential extraction of value-added bioproducts could better demonstrate the economic potential of sustainable and renewable algal feedstock than independent assays for each biochemical.

Keywords

, Chlorella, Bioproducts, Disruption, Drying, Sequential extraction, Biorefinery