A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Long-term phycoremediation of hydroponic drainwater in a pilot-scale turbidostat




AuthorsBorhan, Emren; Korhonen, Ville; Sirin, Sema; Allahverdiyeva, Yagut

Publication year2026

Journal: Journal of Environmental Management

Article number129635

Volume405

ISSN0301-4797

eISSN1095-8630

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2026.129635

Publication's open availability at the time of reportingOpen Access

Publication channel's open availability Partially Open Access publication channel

Web address https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2026.129635

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/522998483

Self-archived copy's licenceCC BY

Self-archived copy's versionPublisher`s PDF


Abstract

Drainwater from hydroponic greenhouse production presents environmental and regulatory challenges for discharge due to high concentrations of nitrogen and phosphorus. Microalgae-based treatment (phycoremediation) has been proposed as an integrated solution to recover nutrients and mitigate effluent impact, but its long-term performance under seasonally variable, low-irradiance greenhouse conditions remains to be evaluated.

Here we report the performance of continuous phycoremediation using green microalgae Scenedesmus sp. NIVA-CHL 99 cultivated in 1000 L closed tubular vertical photobioreactor (PBR) treating commercial cucumber greenhouse effluent (N–NO3: 233–422 mg L−1; P–PO4: 21–49.5 mg L−1). Sixteen operations were conducted over one year (April 2024 – May 2025) under batch, chemostat, and turbidostat modes with varied hydraulic retention times (HRT: 5–20 days [d]) and solids retention times (SRT: 2.5–5 d) in Nordic greenhouse environment.

Turbidostat operation at an intermediate OD setpoint (OD890 = 1.2) resulted in most effective overall performance, achieving robust nitrate removal (26.1 mg N–NO3 L−1 d−1) and biomass productivity (0.55 g DW L−1 d−1), while consistently meeting European Union (EU) discharge limits (TN < 6 mg L−1; TP < 0.5 mg L−1). Low-OD (OD890 = 0.9) turbidostat reached 41.1 mg N–NO3 L−1 d−1 but compromised discharge quality. Chemostat modes yielded high biomass productivity (0.68 g DW L−1 d−1) with less treatment flexibility. Light, temperature, and HRT/SRT effects on daily nutrient removal and biomass productivity were evaluated.

This study demonstrates the operational balance of greenhouse-integrative phycoremediation between drainwater treatment capacity, discharge compliance, and biomass productivity. Continuous turbidostat phycoremediation combines nutrient recovery with stable algal biomass production, reducing reliance on synthetic fertilizers and lowering operational costs. The approach advances year-round, scalable microalgal cultivation in the Nordics while transforming drainwater into resource stream within circular bioeconomy framework.


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Funding information in the publication
This research was funded by the European Union (Grant agreement ID: 101060991, REALM), a donation from Maa-ja vesitekniikan tuki ry, University of Turku Graduate School (UTUGS), and Business Finland Co-Research AlgaCircle (Project number: 2621/31/2024). The authors also acknowledge the FIN-BioFoundry FIRI infrastructure for providing technical background and facilities.


Last updated on 24/04/2026 02:22:34 PM