RSC Advances ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (48) ◽  
pp. 38141-38151 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Kadkhodaei ◽  
S. Abbasiliasi ◽  
T. J. Shun ◽  
H. R. Fard Masoumi ◽  
M. S. Mohamed ◽  
...  

Schematic diagram of the upstream and downstream factors affecting transgene expression.


1996 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
J.L. Garc�a S�nchez ◽  
J.A. S�nchez P�rez ◽  
F. Garc�a Camacho ◽  
J.M. Fern�ndez Sevilla ◽  
E. Molina Grima

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shubhangi Mishra ◽  
Pradeep Kumar Srivast ◽  
Virendra Singh ◽  
Monika Sharma

Abstract The uncontrolled utilization for the textile products is increasing year by year resulting with the elevating wastewater generated from the textile industries, which makes it among the prevalent sources of critical environmental deteoration issue globally. Products obtained from the dyes used are the primary toxic product for aquatic life, they cause aesthetic pollution, eutrophication, perturbation and increase in BOD and COD in aquatic life. Three types of textile wastewaters (Acid Yellow dye, Acid orange dye and Basic pink dye) has been used for wastewater treatment and microalgal (Chlorella pyrenoidosa) biomass production. Nitrogen content in textile wastewaters is very less, hence urea is used as nitrogen source in wastewater. Optimal growth condition (Urea-0.4g/L, wastewater- 40%(v/v)) is developed through Response surface methodology (RSM). The biomass productivity for chlorella sp. is 1.2-1.5 g/L/day in textile wastewaters. The reduction efficiency of COD, Nitrate-N Ammonia-N, Phosphate-P, and Dye(color) removal for Chlorella is 90-95%, 75-85%, 90-98%, 65-74% and 40-65%.After harvesting the Biomass by flocculation method it can be used for biofuel production by in-situ transesterification.


Author(s):  
R. Kanimozhi ◽  
D. Arvind Prasath ◽  
R. Dhandapani ◽  
Santhosh Sigamani

Microalgae is gaining popularity as a major ingredient in nutrition supplements. To mass cultivate, it is imperative to improve the biomass yield hence optimization of cultures conditions becomes paramount. In this work, an attempt has been made to optimize the microalgal production using response surface methodology (RSM) and validate further the optimized parameters. The optimum conditions for the cultivation of Chlorella sp. KPU016 under optimized nutrient conditions were pH 8.2, the light intensity of 3100 lx, glycerol 1.44 g.L-1 (under pre-set conditions of 12 h lighting, the temperature at 27±1°C. With these RSM-driven optimum conditions, the yield of microalgal biomass achieved was 282.50 mg.L-1. For larger-scale microalgal harvesting, the validated optimal conditions can be inferred as the best for enhanced microalgal production. The isolate was partially sequenced and submitted to the NCBI database and the GenBank accession number is MZ348364.


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