I apologize for not getting any pictures during construction of my solar-powered algae bioreactor, but I only decided to make an instructable out of it after the fact. There are many diy's about making biodiesel out of oil, and algae has been discussed far and wide as a great source of vegetable oil for conversion. However, I've only seen a few homebrew solutions for actually GROWING the algae. There's a great one here on instructables, but it uses CO2 bottles to provide the algae with the carbon dioxide which they need to grow. As a proof of concept that's fine, but I don't think it makes any sense in the long run -- bottled CO2 is probably more expensive both cash-wise and environmentally than the algae grown from it. There's CO2 available in the air, but only a flat, shallow pool of water has adequate surface area to absorb enough CO2 for algae growth. Here's my solution: a solar-powered small aquarium air pump, which aerates the water inside a five-gallon water bottle. Notice that the water is cloudy after only a couple of days; that's the algae starting to grow. If you look closely you can clearly see the air bubbles which prove that the air pump is still running; the sun has set on the system in this early-evening shot, but the rechargeable batteries are keeping the pump running.
how much algae we produced by these bioreactor
Why do you say this? Algae grow perfectly in lakes, ponds, streams and other sources where the primary nutrients come from aquatic life waste and soil.
Here's what I mean: See the two pictures? The large algae production is a aerial shot of an algae farm in Taiwan. It has 43 biologists and an entire crew underneath them to monitor the health of the 10 cm depth, 76 acre open system. They bleed in chlorine and CO2 at different points, trying to keep the numbers of predators at bay. They closely monitor the amounts of everything added to the system, and at no point would they allow the addition of any more uncontrolled anomalies. The size must be immense order to produce enough algae to be worth the cost of the farm operation. The other photo is a 10 liter high density algae bioreactor in our lab. It receives the ideal light 24/7 and grows the same amount of algae as a 1 acre open pond. The algae is free of contaminates, and the pH, Temperature, density, and nutrient levels are monitored by a small computer.
As for obtaining a particular strain, and its specific nutrients and growth conditions, I recommend anyone to visit these two sites:
www.utex.org
www.oilgae.com
Of course I have no chance of getting very close to ideal growth conditions in my silly homebaked experiment. Then again, maybe I don't need to. A commercial operation needs to be highly optimized but my backyard tank doesn't necessarily need to be. It's possible I could grow some algae, make a little bit of biodiesel, fire up a generator once in a while and generate some free power to help offset my electrical bill.
Anyway, you can grow algae for a variety of home uses, very cost effectively.
Maybe I should write an instructable? In a nutshell, research the species you want to use. Know its ideal pH, temperature, and nutrient needs. Depending on its purpose, you can grow the algae under different conditions. Using a basic kiddie pool and some pool supplies (like a pH and Temperature reader, and maybe an aquarium or fountain pump for agitation-this is why your solar pump is neat), you can get by easily. To harvest, you can scoop out the algae with a net, as long as you are not growing microalgae. If you are going to grow microalgae, or prefer a complete harvest, stop the pump for an hour, and let the algae settle to the bottom. Then, scoop the algae to the drain plug and spread the "soup" onto cookie sheets. let them dry in the sun. It's fully dry when you see the algae as flakes. Scrape it off and grind it up into a powder. Next, you may add it to a chemistry set to get its extract or take it to the biodeisel refinement (a note on this, if going to biodiesel, it will initially be a crude black green oil-under analysis only a portion of the carbon chains will be usable biodiesel, and they'll need to be separated. The rest can be used for lubricant or cooking oils). You can just use the powder or soup for any number of applications- fertilizer, skin moisturizer, food coloring, healthy food, (it all depends on the method and species grown). To minimize predators and bacteria, you may add Cl at 10PPM (every so often), and even throw a greenhouse liner over the top(open it every now and then to prevent O2 poisoning). Carbon can come from CO2 injection or the nutrients (an ingredient like baking soda). BTW, Carbon from waste requires larger farms, and applications that never mind a little poop in the sauce.
The main thing is the research on the strain you want to grow- there are 30,000 known species, and 10,000 of them have been studied for applications :)
There are also any number of ways to grow and harvest Algae. But this way I just described is the easiest and most sterile backyard project off the top of my head.
Can you expand on this process? I have obtained and dried algae which serves quite adequately as a fertilizer component in my compost heap.
It is my understanding that this is a non trivial process and that it requires 200 proof ethanol as opposed to the traditional methanol used in western biodiesel. While there are numerous sites that provide detailed instructions on every aspect of the production of biodiesel from traditional feedstock I can't find anything on the actual process of producing biodiesel from algae.
Any additional information you can provide would be appreciated.
Oil extraction from algae differs because it first involves cracking the cells. Micro algae is desirable because it doubles in numbers every two hours! But, it leads to a problem when trying to get lipids out. Micro algae is smaller than bacteria, so the good 'ol mill method won't work. If the extraction takes too long from the harvest, the algae may begin to break down their lipids for energy, killing your oil content. Then, if the cell cracking is too agitated, the algae cells can burn. And, oil extraction is tough to do thoroughly in a chem lab in amounts over 1 tablespoon of dried algae...
So, you can see the obstacles the greatest minds in the world must overcome to make algae harvests into biodiesel harvests, and at the low low cost of an oil barrel!
To Do and extraction- I'll need to either make an instructable.. or maybe just send you a list of chem supplies and where to get them. Hexane extraction is the popular method to start with, but we made some pretty dandy results in an esterification with two different solvents. Lastly, there was a pretty good idea for doing mass amounts of algae in a pressurized system with butane as the solvent.
Give me a few days, though. I'm too stuffed after Thanksgiving to spend more than a minute or two at the computer....
If you're ultimate goal is simply to produce biodiesel you might be better to to plant a small plot of rapeseed, corn or other high content oil bearing plants which can be readily converted.
Also consider waste oil from local eateries. In most locations they have to pay to have their grease hauled away. If you're prepared to pick it up weekly and give them $50 a month for the privilege you can probably have a virtually unlimited supply of feedstock.
From what I've read, I don't believe there is any difference in oil from algae or any plant source as far as the conversion process is concerned. Extraction is a bit more difficult with algae but from what I've read there are relatively simple and cheap solvent processes (such as hexane extraction) that can be used.
As far as restaurant waste oil is concerned, been there done that. It's yucky, smelly, nasty stuff, the storage cans are very heavy and invariably filthy, it requires a ton of filtering and processing to get ready for the conversion, and it's not worth the time and energy. Worst of all it's boring.
Rape does grow pretty well in my area (San Diego) but it's nowhere near as space efficient as algae. I could devote a pretty large flower bed to it and not harvest enough oil to be worth talking about. But my real objection is again that it's boring. I know how to grow weeds. I just want to know if it's possible to easily grow algae in my back yard, and I have no intention of actually using it -- I don't own a diesel generator and have no intention of buying one. People like GodOfGreen are busy making commercial grade hardware, I just want to know if there's a cheap, easy, fairly effective version for home use. If my solar powered rig ever works, I could say it's CONCEIVABLE that someday I could grow my own fuel oil in my backyard. I'll never do it, but I could.
The original idea with the electrics, though I am an EE, was to provide almost constant pumping without making a full-on solar panel/charging circuit/battery combo. I'm not really an expert on small DC motors but I think they don't like running at voltages much higher OR lower than their rated voltage -- the little 1.5V motor in the pump might burn out if it was running for extended periods at 3.0V or 1.0V. I was hoping that a very simple combination of solar panel, Schottky diode and NiMH battery would be adequate to provide a voltage near to 1.5V continuously....but it wasn't. The motor wound up burning out anyhow.
I've given some thought of doing the full-on design, with a proper charging circuit, high/low voltage cutouts and all, but I don't think it would be worth it. As I said, algae was NOT growing until the pump failed, so there was something basic wrong with my setup, and I'm not inclined to try again until I understand it better.
Also I haven't examined the circuit in detail but it probably needs a couple of zener diodes to provide overcharge protection.
http://www.instructables.com/id/Simple-Algae-Home-CO2-Scrubber-Part-1/
Keep up the good work....
You might also be interested in my Aluminum air battery stuff, you can leverage this design to generate power from soda cans and saltwater....
Two marketable products!