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Harvesting the Toxic Blooms of Summer
Amid summer’s cornucopia, there is one proliferation that is universally dreaded: the toxic algae blooms that float on lakes and streams, killing fish, gobbling oxygen from the water and chasing away swimmers. Composed of tiny organisms such as single-cell phytoplankton, microalgae and cyanobacteria, the phosphorescent blue-green clusters are impossible to miss, but difficult to capture.
“Compared to weeds and other aquatic plants, microalgae are tiny — between 1 and 10 micrometers in width — and so there is no easy way to remove them mechanically,” explains Wen Zhang, director of NJIT’s Sustainable Environmental Nanotechnology and Nanointerfaces Laboratory, who is working with a team of biologists, engineers and entrepreneurs on a new plan of attack.
Last summer, the team launched a custom-designed boat on New Jersey’s Deal Lake that scooped up algae-laden water for treatment on board. Central to the technology is a device that injects nano- and microbubbles of air into the lake, lifting algae from as deep as four feet to the surface for collection by skimmers.
Researchers have discovered that tiny bubbles have a host of useful properties. Suspended in liquids, they have a high degree of stability against dissolution and collapse. Their high surface area and their random movements allow them to move materials around, including nutrients, to enhance plant growth, ozone used in bacteria disinfection and oxygen needed to aerate hypoxic environments.
“Bubbles that are 100-500 micrometers in diameter rise quickly to the surface, and because they’re negatively charged and adhesive, lift the clinging algae,” Zhang says. “We’re also hoping to use this technology to raise dissolved oxygen levels. We’ve found that even finer bubbles, between 100-300 nanometers in diameter, stay suspended in the water much longer, where they slowly collapse and dissolve, boosting oxygen levels for up to five days. This is much better than standard aeration. They also remediate anaerobic processes that produce smelly odors and blackish water.”
Zhang’s team, which is funded by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, is working with the Meadowlands Research and Restoration Institute (MRRI) and BRISEA Inc., an environmental and energy services company, to demonstrate their prototype’s effectiveness in clearing algae. They are also developing a long-term strategy to monitor other water quality parameters, such as dissolved oxygen and turbidity, on state lakes.
The team has modified the boat design several times to improve its efficiency and safety, for both operators and the equipment, says Likun Hua a former Ph.D. student of Zhang’s who is now the director of technology validation and prototypes at BRISEA. “We decided on a pontoon boat, for example, which allowed us to locate the equipment inside the hull, lowering the boat’s height to fit under bridges.”
After driving the boat back and forth over sections of Deal Lake, researchers recorded increases in dissolved oxygen levels of more than 300%, and reduced turbidity where algae was removed.
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They will also test related technologies, such as iron-based nanoparticles with magnetic properties Zhang developed several years ago to absorb the algae and then separate it with a magnet via a process called electrophoresis.
“We’re seeing more and more problems caused by fertilizer and rising water temperatures,” says Francisco Artigas, MRRI’s chief scientist and co-director. “A mechanical approach to removing blue-green algae from freshwater lakes using micro- and nanobubbles is possible. However, this is not a long-term solution to the problem. The solution is through community education and rules to prevent the blooms from happening in the first place by preventing the discharge of fertilizers and nutrients into natural freshwater bodies.”
Shark Science
As she carves out her own niche in shark science, Ph.D. biology student Amani Webber-Schultz is equally focused on widening the pool of researchers who will join her in scholarly pursuit of the apex predator. Nearly three years ago, Webber-Schultz and three other Black scientists founded the nonprofit Minorities in Shark Sciences (MISS) to boost diversity in the field, in part by fully funding hands-on research experiences for gender minorities of color who struggle financially to break in.
“Getting field experience in marine sciences is often payto-play, and it’s very expensive to get your foot in the door. A few days of introductory field training aboard a research vessel can quickly add up to thousands of dollars per person,” says Webber-Schultz, MISS’s CFO, who studies shark tail
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