April 18, 2026
Journal Article

Hydrocyclone Pre-Processing of Wastewater Algae: A Strategy for Inorganic Ash Separation

Abstract

Microalgae cultivation on wastewater can provide remediation and generate valuable feedstocks for biofuel production. Wastewater algae typically have a high percentage of inorganic ash, which can reduce yield and quality of biocrude produced during hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL). In this work, we evaluated the ability of hydrocyclone pre-processing to remove inorganic ash from wastewater algae. The pH of the algae slurry was adjusted to 9.5 to encourage the formation of precipitates and create a density differential between ash particles and algal cells. Hydrocyclone processing successfully concentrated ash particles in the underflow fraction and reduced the total ash percentage in the overflow fraction. Overall, hydrocyclone processing reduced the total ash by 21%, while only 8% of organics were lost. Elemental and mineral analysis showed that Mg and P were concentrated in the underflow in the form of baricite (an isomorph of vivianite). Future research should focus on improving vivianite and/or baricite formation, and therefore ash removal, by providing a reducing environment. The addition of multiple hydrocyclones in series could also improve the removal of ash. We concluded that hydrocyclone treatment of wastewater algae is a feasible method to remove inorganic ash, but further process optimization is required.

Published: April 18, 2026

Citation

Brown R.M., B.D. Wahlen, C. Steven, H. Rollins, and P.J. Valdez. 2026. Hydrocyclone Pre-Processing of Wastewater Algae: A Strategy for Inorganic Ash Separation. Algal Research 95:104607. PNNL-SA-219343. doi:10.1016/j.algal.2026.104607

Research topics