Engineering of bio-mimetic substratum topographies for enhanced early colonization of filamentous algae

Ali Khoshkhoo, Andres L Carrano, David M. Blersch, Kamran Kardel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This work reveals a set of surface topography parameters that are significant for algal attachment to natural rock substrata. Topography analysis of rock surfaces from a stream identifies three descriptive areal parameters ( S mr , S v , and S a ) that correlate with the presence of natural periphyton community. A method was developed and validated to reverse engineer and manufacture artificial substrata with topographic complexity defined by these parameters, using computational modeling and additive manufacturing. Results from colonization experiments with filamentous algae show statistically significant increases in early biomass accrual rates on substrata with higher values of S a and S v parameters and lower values of S mr parameter. These results suggest that manipulation of the level of roughness (peak-to-valley distance and material ratio above the mean) and the distribution of hill and dale sequences can control initial colonization locations and biomass accrual rates, presumably by enhancing growth and recruitment of cells from the overlying flow into protected refugia spaces. As such, these findings provide an approach for optimizing the design of substratum for increased early biomass productivity for attached growth algae cultivation systems.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalPloS One
Volume14
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 5 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Topography
  • filamentous algae

Disciplines

  • Engineering
  • Manufacturing
  • Mechanical Engineering

Cite this