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1.
Biotechnol Biofuels Bioprod ; 16(1): 181, 2023 Nov 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38008736

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Reducing the costs of biorefinery processes is a crucial step in replacing petrochemical products by sustainable, biotechnological alternatives. Substrate costs and downstream processing present large potential for improvement of cost efficiency. The implementation of in situ adsorption as an energy-efficient product recovery method can reduce costs in both areas. While selective product separation is possible at ambient conditions, yield-limiting effects, as for example product inhibition, can be reduced in an integrated process. RESULTS: An in situ adsorption process was integrated into the production of itaconic acid with Ustilago cynodontis IAmax, as an example of a promising biorefinery process. A suitable feed strategy was developed to enable efficient production and selective recovery of itaconic acid by maintaining optimal glucose concentrations. Online monitoring via Raman spectroscopy was implemented to enable a first process control and understand the interactions of metabolites with the adsorbent. In the final, integrated bioprocess, yield, titre, and space-time yield of the fermentation process were increased to values of 0.41 gIA/gGlucose, 126.5 gIA/L and 0.52 gIA/L/h. This corresponds to an increase of up to 30% in comparison to the first extended batch experiment without in situ product removal. Itaconic acid was recovered with a purity of at least 95% and high concentrations above 300 g/L in the eluate. CONCLUSION: Integration of product separation via adsorption into the bioprocess was successfully conducted and improved the efficiency of itaconic acid production. Raman spectroscopy was proven to be a reliable tool for online monitoring of various metabolites and facilitated design and validation of the complex separation and feed process. The general process concept can be transferred to the production of various similar bioproducts, expanding the tool kit for design of innovative biorefinery processes.

2.
Biotechnol Biofuels Bioprod ; 16(1): 49, 2023 Mar 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36934285

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The efficiency of downstream processes plays a crucial role in the transition from conventional petrochemical processes to sustainable biotechnological production routes. One promising candidate for product separation from fermentations with low energy demand and high selectivity is the adsorption of the target product on hydrophobic adsorbents. However, only limited knowledge exists about the interaction of these adsorbents and the bioprocess. The bioprocess could possibly be harmed by the release of inhibitory components from the adsorbent surface. Another possibility is co-adsorption of essential nutrients, especially in an in situ application, making these nutrients unavailable to the applied microorganism. RESULTS: A test protocol investigating adsorbent-bioprocess compatibility was designed and applied on a variety of adsorbents. Inhibitor release and nutrient adsorption was studied in an isolated manner. Respiratory data recorded by a RAMOS device was used to assess the influence of the adsorbents on the cultivation in three different microbial systems for up to six different adsorbents per system. While no inhibitor release was detected in our investigations, adsorption of different essential nutrients was observed. CONCLUSION: The application of adsorption for product recovery from the bioprocess was proven to be generally possible, but nutrient adsorption has to be assessed for each application individually. To account for nutrient adsorption, adsorptive product separation should only be applied after sufficient microbial growth. Moreover, concentrations of co-adsorbed nutrients need to be increased to compensate nutrient loss. The presented protocol enables an investigation of adsorbent-bioprocess compatibility with high-throughput and limited effort.

3.
J Chromatogr A ; 1675: 463140, 2022 Jul 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35635868

RESUMO

The use of adsorption for the purification of dicarboxylic acids is rather limited and currently predominantly confined to ion-exchange chromatography. A promising, but less regarded alternative is the use of hydrophobic adsorbents. Regarding hydrophobic absorbents, the literature focuses on screenings of adsorbents for purification of (di)carboxylic acids with regard to adsorption equilibria. The investigation of dynamic phenomena in the column received only minor attention. In this contribution, this knowledge gap is addressed. First, the adsorption behavior of itaconic acid species on the hydrophobic, highly-crosslinked polymeric adsorbent Chromalite™ PCG1200C is investigated. For this purpose, adsorption isotherms are determined via frontal analysis at pH values of 2, 3, 4.5, 6.5, and 8 to evaluate the dependency of the adsorption capacity on the dissociation state. Capacities above 150 g Lads-1 at liquid phase concentrations of 70 g L-1 are observed at a pH of 2. A strong decrease of capacity with increasing pH value, i.e., with increasing fraction of dissociated negatively charged acid species, is observed. Second, pulse experiments at aforementioned pH values are performed. Thereby, in-line Raman spectra are recorded at the column outlet, which allows the direct differentiation of the acid species state of dissociation. The spectral information is evaluated for quantitative concentration profiles of itaconic acid species using Indirect Hard Modeling with mixture hard models that are calibrated subject to ideal as well as non-ideal thermodynamics. In-line measurement errors of ≤ 3.5 g L-1 are achieved for the itaconic acid species. In dependency of the pH of the feed solution, a separation of the individual acid species within the pulse experiments is observed. It is conjectured that the process is dominated by a superposition of species-dependent adsorption characteristics and dissociation reactions.


Assuntos
Análise Espectral Raman , Succinatos , Adsorção , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Cinética , Polímeros , Termodinâmica
4.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32974309

RESUMO

Rhamnolipids are biosurfactants produced by microorganisms with the potential to replace synthetic compounds with petrochemical origin. To promote industrial use of rhamnolipids, recombinant rhamnolipid production from sugars needs to be intensified. Since this remains challenging, the aim of the presented research is to utilize a multidisciplinary approach to take a step toward developing a sustainable rhamnolipid production process. Here, we developed expression cassettes for stable integration of the rhamnolipid biosynthesis genes into the genome outperformed plasmid-based expression systems. Furthermore, the genetic stability of the production strain was improved by using an inducible promoter. To enhance rhamnolipid synthesis, energy- and/or carbon-consuming traits were removed: mutants negative for the synthesis of the flagellar machinery or the storage polymer PHA showed increased production by 50%. Variation of time of induction resulted in an 18% increase in titers. A scale-up from shake flasks was carried out using a 1-L bioreactor. By recycling of the foam, biomass loss could be minimized and a rhamnolipid titer of up to 1.5 g/L was achieved without using mechanical foam destroyers or antifoaming agents. Subsequent liquid-liquid extraction was optimized by using a suitable minimal medium during fermentation to reduce undesired interphase formation. A technical-scale production process was designed and evaluated by a life-cycle assessment (LCA). Different process chains and their specific environmental impact were examined. It was found that next to biomass supply, the fermentation had the biggest environmental impact. The present work underlines the need for multidisciplinary approaches to address the challenges associated with achieving sustainable production of microbial secondary metabolites. The results are discussed in the context of the challenges of microbial biosurfactant production using hydrophilic substrates on an industrial scale.

5.
J Chromatogr A ; 1610: 460565, 2020 Jan 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31615624

RESUMO

One of the main steps in designing preparative chromatographic separation units is the selection of a well-performing adsorbent. This is often based on expert knowledge or based on case studies of preselected adsorbents. Therefore, the selection is usually limited in terms of an optimised choice. In this contribution, a model-based optimisation of the selection of an adsorbent on the basis of correlations between structural adsorbent properties with model parameters of a transport dispersive model is proposed. Model parameters of glucose and xylose for five cation exchanger resins with varying degree of cross-linking are experimentally determined in a sequential approach. Void fractions and particle porosities were determined by pulse experiments with different tracers. Single-component isotherms were determined threefold via breakthrough curves with concentrations of up to 250 g l-1 at 60 °C. Mass transfer coefficients were determined by batch experiments. Correlations between the degree of cross-linking of the resins and the Henry coefficients as well as the mass transfer coefficients were derived and applied in an optimisation case study. Based on the derived mathematical formula, the process performance of experimentally not investigated resins were predicted. Further, the selection of a resin for a preparative monosaccharide separation was included into optimisation algorithms.


Assuntos
Resinas de Troca de Cátion/química , Reagentes de Ligações Cruzadas/química , Modelos Teóricos , Monossacarídeos/isolamento & purificação , Adsorção , Porosidade , Temperatura
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