Industrial Plankton Inc.

Algae in Research

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Laboratory Microalgae Culture Made Easy: Algae research is critical for advancing nutraceuticals, biofuels, animal feed additives, bioprospecting, bioremediation, and aquaculture, but a breakthrough based on small scale flask cultures often does not scale to industrial production. Industrial Plankton’s closed photobioreactors (PBRs) are ideal for maintaining biosecurity and reducing labor when scaling beyond flask and carboy cultures.

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  • Producing enough clean algae for assays, benchmarking, and agency approvals is challenging and labor intensive
  • Standard culture methods lack the controls required to optimize strains and achieve consistent results
  • Flask scale findings do not scale reliably to pilot and commercial scales
  • Larger cultures lack biosecurity, leading to contaminated cultures, poor production, and invalid experimental results
  • Improve clarity of results and extend culture lifetime through better biosecurity
  • Real-time data logging and graphing make it easy to optimize algae production in real-time
  • Monitor and control photobioreactor cultures from anywhere in the world with remote access
  • Minimize cleaning labor and increase reliability with the self-cleaning CIP system
  • Increase biomass production capabilities with minimal floor space
  • Plug & play algae equipment lets you hit the ground running
  • Turnkey algae photobioreactors with optional on-site installation and training
  • Full schematic and instructions for easy use and maintenance
  • Remote support, onboarding and training until your algae culture’s production hits its milestones
  • Real-time data logging and graphing that allows us to help you optimize production
  • PlanktonCare, an optional extended warranty with remote monitoring and consultation

“The PBR has been very productive and low maintenance. The cleaning method is superior to any other method I have used over 15 years of culturing…”

Monte A. McGregor, Ph.D – Aquatic Scientist/Malacologist Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Center for Mollusc Conservation