This invention relates to an apparatus and a method for growing photosynthetic microorganisms, such as algae. One implementation is to use the apparatus to sequester carbon dioxide in exhaust gas, thereby providing a gas cleaning systems for fossil burning plants.
It is well known that fossil fuels, such as petroleum-derived fuels and coal, are limited in supply. Additionally, the combustion of such fuels contributes substantial carbon to the atmosphere. The release of carbon long stored in such fuels is the subject of global concern relating to climate change and other environmental problems. Nevertheless, fossil fuels are the largest fuel source for automobiles and energy production facilities.
The U.S. produces an estimated 1.7 billion tons of CO2 annually from the combustion of fossil fuels. Even if an expensive option for CO2 removal is discovered, CO2 “disposal” is problematic. U.S. industries consume only 40 million tons of CO2, produced at a much lower price than possible by removing CO2 from flue gas, which is the exhaust gas from a fossil fuel burning power plant. Therefore, increased consumption of CO2 appears limited, and options for expanded use appear limited and costly.
Existing power plants have capital values in the hundreds of billions of dollars, and sequestration of CO2 is necessary in order to keep the plants operating without releasing more CO2 into the atmosphere. A feasible option involves biological carbon sequestration in outdoor ponds near the power plants. However, there are inherent inefficiencies related to this solution for CO2 sequestration, primarily due to the amount of cyanobacteria that can be grown in a given volume. For example, if 2,000,000 m2 of photosynthetic surface area is required for 25% reduction of CO2 emissions from a power plant, that is equivalent to almost 500 acres of surface. Very few existing plants have 500 acres available to them and fewer could afford to convert 500 acres to a shallow lake or raceway cultivator. Also, there are serious questions about how to distribute the flue gas (or separated CO2) into the lake for maximum growth, not to mention what to do with the gas once it bubbles to the surface. The flue gas would have to be collected again and redirected up a stack to meet other emission requirements. Further, maintaining such a large “lake” during a Midwestern winter would introduce more practical problems.
Clearly, other approaches for CO2 control are needed. Research to develop a robust portfolio of carbon management options, including safe and effective photosynthetic carbon recycling, will enable continued use of coal in electrical power generation. Despite the large body of research in this area, virtually no work has been done to create a practical system for greenhouse gas control, one that could be used with both new and existing fossil units.
One area of increased interest for carbon sequestration is in biofuels, which are derived from recently living organisms or their metabolic byproducts. Biofuels contain different hydrogen and carbon-containing molecules than fossil fuels, and sufficient enthalpy to compete with fossil fuels for vehicle fuel and energy production. Most biofuels are considered neutral in their release of carbon into the atmosphere. This is due to the fact that, even though the living organisms remove carbon from the air, that carbon is subsequently released during the chemical reaction that produces work from the stored solar energy.
Biofuels are a renewable energy source, unlike other natural resources such as petroleum, coal, and nuclear fuels. For example, some biofuels can be grown in a conventional setting, such as a farm field, while others must be grown in unique, controlled settings. A bioreactor is a vessel in which a chemical process is carried out that involves organisms or biochemically active substances derived from such organisms. Known bioreactors take the exhaust gases of, for example, fossil fuel burning power plants, and use the CO2 therein to “fuel” growth of microalgae and other photosynthetic microorganisms. Such bioreactors prevent carbon from the exhaust gas stream from being released into the air, and produce biofuels that provides additional energy. Open-pond bioreactor systems have existed for some time, but are unsuitable in many ways, especially for large sources of CO2.
Microalgae have much faster growth-rates than terrestrial crops. Depending on the bioreactor and the strain, the per unit area yield of oil from algae is estimated to be many times greater than the next best crop, which is palm oil. Algal-oil processes into biodiesel as easily as oil derived from land-based crops. The difficulties in efficient biodiesel production from algae lie in finding a cost-effective bioreactor that is best suited to a strain of algae that contains sufficient lipids.
Microalgae are organisms capable of photosynthesis that are less than 2 mm in diameter. These include the diatoms and cyanobacteria. This preference towards microalgae is due largely to its less complex structure, fast growth rate, and high oil content in some species.
Despite the scientific advantages of biofuels and the availability of bioreactors that are capable of producing such fuels and sequestering carbon, economic disadvantages have restricted the extent to which bioreactors have been implemented. For example, one disadvantage of conventional bioreactors is the fact that they become economically feasible only when natural light is used. The ability to expose microorganisms to sufficient natural light is a function of the exposed surface area of conventional bioreactors. Space is not always available where large supplies of CO2 are being produced. Biofuels produced from such bioreactors can only compete with petroleum-based fuels if their production is high enough that economies of scale exist. This is difficult with conventional bioreactors.
The production of microalgae as a feedstock for mitigation of carbon dioxide emission and production of biofuels requires environmentally controlled bioreactors that are capable of maximum productivity for the lowest possible capital cost. Ohio University has created an interesting and viable bioreactor system based upon light collection and distribution from external sources. This system optimizes the use of collected photons, but significantly increases the capital cost.
Therefore, the need exists for a bioreactor that makes carbon sequestration and biofuel production economically feasible.
An object of the invention is a high degree of algal productivity and environmental control using a hybrid arrangement of light collection and distribution, while minimizing the capital cost for the overall system. The bioreactor according to the invention is illuminated with a combination of collected and “natural” (direct) light sources, making it a hybrid system. The invention is thus not as efficient as one that is illuminated from collected and specifically distributed light. However, it allows for vast increases in productivity over a system that depends totally on incident sunlight, such as a greenhouse, raceway cultivator or pond, and does so at substantially less cost compared to one that is illuminated only from collected and specifically distributed light. The arrangement of the light collection hardware to the “greenhouse” containment reactor is important to the operation of bioreactors made according to the invention, so as to maximize the photosynthetically active radiation available to the microalgae or cyanobacteria and thereby produce significant photosynthetic activity.
The invention eases the transition from the least effective, lowest capital cost option for growing cyanobacteria and microalgae (the open pond) to the more efficient system (the Ohio University bioreactor described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,667,171, which is incorporated herein by reference). The hybrid bioreactor of the invention uses incident light directly from the sun and also uses collected and distributed light to make up for the significant lack of penetration and distribution that would result from using only incident sunlight. This provides an excellent balance of costs and efficiency, as compared to the existing systems.
This invention was made with Government support under contract DE-FG36-08GO88083 awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
In describing the preferred embodiment of the invention which is illustrated in the drawings, specific terminology will be resorted to for the sake of clarity. However, it is not intended that the invention be limited to the specific term so selected and it is to be understood that each specific term includes all technical equivalents which operate in a similar manner to accomplish a similar purpose. For example, the word connected or terms similar thereto are often used. They are not limited to direct connection, but include connection through other elements where such connection is recognized as being equivalent by those skilled in the art.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/181,682 filed May 28, 2010. This priority application is hereby incorporated by reference.
The preferred embodiment of the present invention is shown in
In the preferred embodiment, all or most of the sidewalls 12 and 22 of the bioreactors 10 and 20 are translucent (or transparent) to permit a significant amount of light, preferably sunlight, incident upon the sidewalls 12 and 22 to penetrate through the sidewalls, thereby striking the interior surfaces within the bioreactors 10 and 20, including the membranes 14 and 24. The sidewalls 12 and 22 thus allow “natural” daylight to provide some of the photons required for photosynthetic growth on the membranes. By making at least one of the sidewalls (such as the ceiling and vertical walls) of the bioreactor container translucent, light incident thereon is allowed to pass through to the substrates without substantial loss of intensity.
Using the translucent sidewalls 12 and 22 alone, a bioreactor would have light incident on the membranes 14 and 24 as shown in
As shown in
Optical waveguides, such as conventional fiber optic cables 32 (see
It should be noted that the invention does not apply only to vertical membrane photobioreactors. The invention has application in any bioreactor using vertical containment, including plastic bag bioreactors and tube bioreactors known to persons having ordinary skill All bioreactors that use vertical substrates or containment have problems with self-shading, attenuation when the algal colony gets too dense or thick, and ineffective light distribution. Vertically-mounted bioreactors have problems with either too much light incident on the substrates or containment (creating photo-inhibition), or too little light incident on the substrates or containment (resulting in limited growth of the microorganisms).
The combination of the invention provides the benefits of low cost and high light incidence on the substrates. The combination of a transparent exterior photobioreactor and an apparatus that collects and distributes light to the lower regions of the substrates provides these benefits. Significant growth of the microorganisms can be achieved at much less cost using a suspended growth membrane photobioreactor with “open” and collected and distributed sunlight, than with embodiments using an opaque exterior and delivering all photosynthetic active radiation from collected and distributed photons. The distributed lighting in the areas of the bioreactor receiving low light incidence in morning and evening (seen in
The use of the conventional collecting system having a tracking system with minors and distribution using fiber optics to carry photosynthetically active radiation into the “dark” regions of the bioreactor more than doubles the incident photons in the bioreactor on a daily basis, when compared to transparent bioreactors alone. Also important is the fact that the particular trough 30 apparatus between pairs of bioreactors optimizes the distribution of photons. Areas of the bioreactors that experience too high a level of photons due to natural sunlight are partially shaded by the trough 30 in the morning and evening. Furthermore, areas of the bioreactors that would otherwise be too dark with a transparent exterior alone receive photons at a favorable flux to optimize photosynthetic efficiency and productivity in the overall bioreactor.
The shape and size of the bioreactors 10 and 20 is not critical, and it will become apparent to a person having ordinary skill that other shapes and sizes can be substituted for those shown and described. Furthermore, the use of the collecting trough 30 is advantageous, but those of ordinary skill will know of other collecting and distributing structures that could be substituted for that shown in the preferred embodiment.
This detailed description in connection with the drawings is intended principally as a description of the presently preferred embodiments of the invention, and is not intended to represent the only form in which the present invention may be constructed or utilized. The description sets forth the designs, functions, means, and methods of implementing the invention in connection with the illustrated embodiments. It is to be understood, however, that the same or equivalent functions and features may be accomplished by different embodiments that are also intended to be encompassed within the spirit and scope of the invention and that various modifications may be adopted without departing from the invention or scope of the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US10/36297 | 5/27/2010 | WO | 00 | 11/28/2011 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61181682 | May 2009 | US |