Authors
Mai Pham, Lance Schideman, John Scott, Nandakishore Rajagopalan, Michael J Plewa
Publication date
2013/2/19
Journal
Environmental science & technology
Volume
47
Issue
4
Pages
2131-2138
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Description
Hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) is an attractive method for converting wet biomass into petroleum-like biocrude oil that can be refined to make petroleum products. This approach is advantageous for conversion of low-lipid algae, which are promising feedstocks for sustainable large-scale biofuel production. As with natural petroleum formation, the water in contact with the produced oil contains toxic compounds. The objectives of this research were to: (1) identify nitrogenous organic compounds (NOCs) in wastewater from HTL conversion of Spirulina; (2) characterize mammalian cell cytotoxicity of specific NOCs, NOC mixture, and the complete HTL wastewater (HTL-WW) matrix; and (3) investigate mitigation measures to reduce toxicity in HTL-WW. Liquid–liquid extraction and nitrogen–phosphorus detection was used in conjunction with gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS), which detected hundreds of …
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