Fermentation Technology - Oxygen transfer, Antifoam Agents, Agitation, Aeration
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Transcript of Fermentation Technology - Oxygen transfer, Antifoam Agents, Agitation, Aeration
Oxygen Transfer
Majority of fermentation processes are aerobic and therefore require the provision of oxygen.
If the stoichiometry of respiration is considered then the oxidation of glucose is represented by
C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6H2O+6CO2
Thus 192 gms of O2 is required for 180 gm glucose. Also oxygen is required for product formation ex: for
pencillin production 2.2 gms of oxygen is required for 1g pencillin formation
Microorganisms take up the substrate/ nutrient from liquid
Hence both O2 and glucose have to be available in liquid
Solubility of oxygen in water is 1.26 mmol/l at 25oC OR approx 8 mg/l
This will reduce further in the presence of salt or acid
This solubility is 6000 times lesser than the solubility of glucose
Thus it is not possible to supply entire oxygen required for batch fermentation in one addition.
Oxygen will be supplied continuously at the rate of demand by the microorganism.
Oxygen is consumed quickly in aerobic cultures. For actively respirating yeast with 109 cells /ml oxygen in liquid have to be replaced 12 times in minute to keep up the cellular demand.
O2 in the liquid is measured as Dissolved oxygen concentration
OUR = qo X
OUR = oxygen uptake rateqo= specific oxygen uptake rate
X = biomass concentration
Cell concentration increases oxygen requirement increases
Upto certain DO concentration in the liquid the specific oxygen uptake rate increases with DO and remain constant after that.
E.coli = 0.008 mmol/lS.cereviseae = 0.004 mmol/lPencillium sp = 0.022 mmol/l
Time
qo
X
qo X
qo
DO
1
Flux = resistance X driving forceNA = kLa X (C*-C)
NA = Oxygen transfer rate
kLa = Volumetric Mass transfer coefficient
C*-C = Concentration gradient.The concentration gradient is small because of
poor solubility of oxygen. Hence it is not easy task.
2
12
3
4
5
67 8
1.1. Transfer from the interior of the bubble to the gas liquid interfaceTransfer from the interior of the bubble to the gas liquid interface2.2. Movement across the gas liquid interfaceMovement across the gas liquid interface3.3. Diffusion through relatively stagnant film surrounding the bubbleDiffusion through relatively stagnant film surrounding the bubble4.4. Transport through the bulk liquid Transport through the bulk liquid 5.5. Diffusion through the relatively stagnant film surrounding the cellsDiffusion through the relatively stagnant film surrounding the cells6.6. Movement across the liquid cell interfaceMovement across the liquid cell interface
7.7. If the cells are in a floc, clump diffusion through the solid to the If the cells are in a floc, clump diffusion through the solid to the individual cellindividual cell
8.8. Transport through the cytoplasm to the site of the reactionTransport through the cytoplasm to the site of the reaction
Note: Resistance due to the gas boundary layer on the inside of the bubble has been neglected. If the cells are individually suspended step 7 disappears.
Magnitude of various mass transfer resistance depend on the composition and rheological properties of the liquid, mixing intensity, bubble size, cell clump size, etc.,
For most of the bioreactors the following analysis is valid
Step 1 – relatively fast
Step 2 – negligible resistance
Step 3- major resistance
Step 4 – In well mixed fermenter concentration gradients in the bulk liquid are minimised and resistance is small. However rapid mixing is affected in the viscous broths. In this case the bulk liquid resistance is important example: Xanthan gum production, high viscous mycelial fermentation etc.,
Step 5: Because single cells are much smaller than the gas bubbles, the liquid film surrounding each cell is much thinner than that around the bubbles and its effect on mass transfer can generally be neglected. On the other hand if the cells form large clumps, liquid film resistance can be significant example Citric acid production. A.niger form pellets.
Step 6 – Very small
Step 7 – When the cells are in clumps, intraparticle resistance is significant as oxygen has to diffuse through the solid pellet. Magnitude of this depend on the size of the clumps.
Step 8 – Intracellular transfer resistance is small since distance is very small.
At steady state the rate of oxygen transfer from the bubbles must be equal to the rate of oxygen consumption by the cells. Equations 1 and 2 will be equal.
kLa (C*-C)= qo X
kLa is used to characterize the oxygen mass transfer capability
If it is small then the ability of the reactor to deliver oxygen is small.
At steady state if stirrer speed is increased i.e kLa is increased (Raising stirrer speed will reduce the thickness of the boundary layer surrounding the bubble) the dissolved oxygen concentration increases
At the same time if the cell concentration is increased at constant kLa the DO will decrease
3
Equation 3 can be used for deriving relationships for fermenters.
For a given set of operating conditions the maximum rate of oxygen transfer occurs when the driving force is maximum.
i.e. C*-C is highest. In otherwords when C = 0Sub in eqn 3 for obtaining maximum cell
concentration supported by the reactorXmax = kLa C*/qo
If Xmax is lower than the required cell concentration in fermentation then kLa should be improved.
(kLa)crit =qoX/(C*-Ccrit)
FACTORS AFFECTING OXYGEN TRANSFER
OTR kL
a(C*-C)
Bubbles Efficiency of OTR depends to large extent on
the characteristic of bubble Bubble behaviour mostly affect kLa
In stirred fermenter air is sparged under the impeller In lab fermenters very good mixing will be there
hence bubbles in the system are frequently subject to distortions (10-20 KW/m3)
In contrast in industrial fermenters most of the time bubbles are freely floating after initial dispersion (0.5 – 5 KW/m3)
Reason P/V value are low in large fermenters
The most important property of air bubbles in fermenter is its size Smaller the size
Greater is the interfacial area a Slow bubble rise velocity and stays for
longer time in fermenter giving more time for oxygen transfer
Create high gas holdup () = VG/(VL+VG)
VG – Vol of gas bubbles in reactorVL – Vol of liquid
Interfacial area largely depend on gas holdup. It varies between 0.01 to 0.2
One side it is desirable to have smaller bubbles.
But bubbles less than 1 mm dia can become nuisance in bioreactors
O2 concentration in the bubbles immediately transferred to medium and attains equilibrium. These bubbles staying in the reactor is of no use.
Bubble size also affects kL
Bubbles less than 2-3 mm dia acts as rigid spheres. This lowers kL values
On the other hand bubbles greater in size have relatively mobile surfaces.
These bubbles are able to wobble and move in spirals during free rise
Due to this they have beneficial effect 2-3 mm bubbles 3-4 X 10-4 m/s kL values Bubble size reduced kL reduces to 1 X 10-4
Above 3 mm kL values are constant
Air bubbles are formed at the sparger
Sparger design varies from open pipe, porous diffusers, perforated pipes and complex injectors
Normally air flow rates used are 0.5 to 1.5 vvmThe effect of air flow rate on kLa values is given in the diagram
Aeration and agitation
0.50 1.0
This air flow rate is maintained during scaleup
If the impeller is unable to disperse the incoming air then OTR decreases extremely due to impeller flooding.
Flooding is the phenomena where the air flow dominates the flow pattern
Air velocityStirrer speed
The degree of agitation played major role in oxygen transfer Agitation increases the air available by dispersing
the air in the culture in the form of bubbles It delays escape of air bubbles from the system It prevents coalescence of bubbles to bigger ones. It decreases the thickness of liquid film at the gas
liquid interface by creating turbulence in the culture
To avoid flooding minimum impeller tip speed for dispersion of air bubbles 1.5 – 2.5 m/s
Flooding could be avoided if
F/ND3 < 0.3 N2D/g
F – Volumetric air flow rate
N – stirrer speed
D – stirrer diameter
g – accelaration due to gravity
Viscosity changes flow properties such as surface tension etc will affect kLa
Increase in viscosity decreases kLa
Increase in viscosity may occur due to biomass in case of fungal mycelia formation or some products such as polysachharides production
Broth Viscosity
High degree of aeration and agitation will result in foam formation.
Foaming reduces oxygen transfer. Air bubbles entrapped in the foam and again and again they recirculate in the medium. This will result in oxygen depleted bubbles residing in the system
To control foam antifoam agents are added.
Antifoam agents
Most of the antifoams are surface tension lowering substances
This will result in rigid bubble formation and resistance to oxygen transfer.
Also antifoams in the liquid may favour coalescence of bubbles in freely moving areas which again will decrease oxygen transfer.
OTR can be reduced dramatically even by factor of 10.
Normally salts suppress the coalescence of bubbles hence it favors OTR
Increase in suspended solids will decrease OTR in High cell density cultivation
Temperature increase beyond 40 oC will decrease oxygen solubility hence OTR
Vessel geometry will influence OTR. If H/D ratio is more bubble residence time is more and hence OTR may increase.
Other factors
kLa and Power consumption
A large number of empirical relationships have been developed between kLa, power consumption and superficial gas velocity
kLa = k(P/V)x Vsy
P –Power absorptionV- Volume of the reactorVs – Superficial airvelocityk,x,y – empirical constants
Value of x is dependant on the size of the vessel Laboratory it is 0.95 Pilot plant – 0.67 Production fermenter – 0.5
k – 0.026
x- 0.4
y- 0.5
Major Factors in ScaleupMajor Factors in Scaleup
Inoculum developmentInoculum development SterilizationSterilization Environmental parametersEnvironmental parameters
Nutrient availabilityNutrient availability pHpH TemperatureTemperature Dissolved oxygen concentrationDissolved oxygen concentration Shear conditionsShear conditions Dissolved CODissolved CO22 concentration concentration Foam productionFoam production
AerationAeration
Agi
tatio
nA
gita
tion
COCO22
Bulk mixingBulk mixing
FoamFoam
CostCostShearShear
OO22
Steps in scaleupSteps in scaleup
Identification of the principal Identification of the principal environmental domain affected by the environmental domain affected by the aeration and agitationaeration and agitation
Identification of the process variable which Identification of the process variable which affects the identified environmental affects the identified environmental domaindomain
Calculation of the value of the process Calculation of the value of the process variable to be used on the large scale variable to be used on the large scale
Process VariableProcess Variable Characteristics Characteristics affectedaffected
Power consumption Power consumption per unit volumeper unit volume
Oxygen Transfer RateOxygen Transfer Rate
Impeller tip speedImpeller tip speed Shear RateShear Rate
Volumetric air flow rateVolumetric air flow rate Oxygen Transfer RateOxygen Transfer Rate
Pumping ratePumping rate Mixing timeMixing time
Reynolds numberReynolds number Heat transferHeat transfer
Criterion used Criterion used in scale up in scale up from 80 to from 80 to 10000 l10000 l
Effect on the operating conditions Effect on the operating conditions on the large scaleon the large scalePP P/VP/V Flow Flow
min-1 vol-1min-1 vol-1NDiNDi
P/VP/V 125125 1.01.0 0.340.34 1.71.7Flow Flow min-1 vol-1min-1 vol-1 31253125 25.025.0 1.01.0 5.05.0NDiNDi 2525 0.20.2 0.20.2 1.01.0Reynolds Reynolds numbernumber
0.20.2 0.00160.0016 0.040.04 0.20.2
Scale down methodScale down method
Medium designMedium design Medium sterilizationMedium sterilization Inoculation proceduresInoculation procedures Number of generationsNumber of generations MixingMixing Oxygen transfer rateOxygen transfer rate