首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 203 毫秒
1.
The quantitative effects of sugar concentration, nitrogen concentration, EDTA, temperature, pH and time of fermentation on ethanol production were optimized using a Box-Wilson central composite design (CCD) experiment. It was found that palmyra jaggery (sugar syrup from the palmyra palm) is a suitable substrate for the production of high concentrations of ethanol using Saccharomyces cerevisiae NCIM 3090 by submerged fermentation. A maximum ethanol concentration of 129.4 g/l was obtained after optimizing media components and conditions of fermentation. The optimum values were a temperature of 26.2 °C, pH of 8.4, time of fermentation of 4.2 days with 398.5 g of substrate/l, 3.1 g of urea/l and 0.51 g of EDTA/l. Thus by using the CCD, it is possible to determine the accurate values of the fermentation parameters where maximum production of ethanol occurs.  相似文献   

2.
Sugarcane-pressmud, a by-product of cane-sugar manufacture, was used as a substrate for production of citric acid by Aspergillus niger CFTRI 30, in a solid-state fermentation system. Of the 170 g of sugar supplied, 131 g were consumed, with a 79% yield of citric acid over 120 h. Potassium ferrocyanide improved the conversion to about 88% and lowered the fermentation time by 24 h. Enrichment with sugar and NH4NO3 was essential to improve productivity. About 174 g citric acid/kg dry sugarcane-pressmud were produced after 120 h in ferrocyanid-treated medium which initially contained 12.5% (w/w) effective sugar and 0.1% (w/w) NH4NO3. About 3% (w/w) of the original sugar present in the sugarcane-pressmud was non-utilizable. This is the first report on the potential of sugarcane-pressmud for citric acid production.V.S. Shankaranand and B.K. Lonsane are with the Fermentation Technology and Bioengineering Discipline, Central Food Technological Research Institute, Mysore-570 013, India  相似文献   

3.
The present investigation deals with citric acid production by some selected mutant strains of Aspergillus niger from cane molasses in 250 ml Erlenmeyer flasks. For this purpose, a conidial suspension of A. niger GCB-75, which produced 31.1 g/l citric acid from 15% (w/v) molasses sugar, was subjected to UV-induced mutagenesis. Among the 3 variants, GCM-45 was found to be a better producer of citric acid (50.0 +/- 2a) and it was further improved by chemical mutagenesis using N-methyl, N-nitro-N-nitroso-guanidine (MNNG). Out of 3,2-deoxy-D-glucose resistant variants, GCMC-7 was selected as the best mutant, which produced 96.1 +/- 1.5 g/l citric acid 168 h after fermentation of potassium ferrocyanide and H2SO4 pre-treated blackstrap molasses in Vogel's medium. On the basis of kinetic parameters such as volumetric substrate uptake rate (Qs), and specific substrate uptake rate (qs), the volumetric productivity, theoretical yield and specific product formation rate, it was observed that the mutants were faster growing organisms and produced more citric acid. The mutant GCMC-7 has greater commercial potential than the parental strain with regard to citrate synthase activity. The addition of 2.0 x 10(-5) M MgSO4 x 5H2O into the fermentation medium reduced the Fe2+ ion concentration by counter-acting its deleterious effect on mycelial growth. The magnesium ions also induced a loose-pelleted form of growth (0.6 mm, diameter), reduced the biomass concentration (12.5 g/l) and increased the volumetric productivity of citric acid monohydrate (113.6 +/- 5 g/l).  相似文献   

4.
The present study deals with submerged ethanol, citric acid, and α-amylase fermentation by Saccharomyces cerevisiae SDB, Aspergillus niger ANSS-B5, and Candida guilliermondii CGL-A10, using date wastes as the basal fermentation medium. The physical and chemical parameters influencing the production of these metabolites were optimized. As for the ethanol production, the optimum yield obtained was 136.00 ± 0.66 g/l under optimum conditions of an incubation period of 72 h, inoculum content of 4% (w/v), sugars concentration of 180.0 g/l, and ammonium phosphate concentration of 1.0 g/l. Concerning citric acid production, the cumulative effect of temperature (30°C), sugars concentration of 150.0 g/l, methanol concentration of 3.0%, initial pH of 3.5, ammonium nitrate concentration of 2.5 g/l, and potassium phosphate concentration of 2.5 g/l during the fermentation process of date wastes syrup did increase the citric acid production to 98.42 ± 1.41 g/l. For the production of α-amylase, the obtained result shows that the presence of starch strongly induces the production of α-amylase with a maximum at 5.0 g/l. Among the various nitrogen sources tested, urea at 5.0 g/l gave the maximum biomass and α-amylase estimated at 5.76 ± 0.56 g/l and 2,304.19 ± 31.08 μmol/l/min, respectively after 72 h incubation at 30°C, with an initial pH of 6.0 and potassium phosphate concentration of 6.0 g/l.  相似文献   

5.
The biochemical kinetic of direct fermentation for lactic acid production by fungal species of Rhizopus arrhizus 3,6017 and Rhizopus oryzae 2,062 was studied with respect to growth pH, temperature and substrate. The direct fermentation was characterized by starch hydrolysis, accumulation of reducing sugar, and production of lactic acid and fungal biomass. Starch hydrolysis, reducing sugar accumulation, biomass formation and lactic acid production were affected with the variations in pH, temperature, and starch source and concentration. A growth condition with starch concentration approximately 20 g/l at pH 6.0 and 30°C was favourable for both starch saccharification and lactic acid fermentation, resulting in lactic acid yield of 0.87–0.97 g/g starch associated with 1.5–2.0 g/l fungal biomass produced in 36 h fermentation. R. arrhizus 3,6017 had a higher capacity to produce lactic acid, while R. oryzae 2,062 produced more fungal biomass under similar conditions.  相似文献   

6.
The production of citric and gluconic acids from fig by Aspergillus niger ATCC 10577 in solid-state fermentation was investigated. The maximal citric and gluconic acids concentration (64 and 490 g/kg dry figs, respectively), citric acid yield (8%), and gluconic acid yield (63%) were obtained at a moisture level of 75%, initial pH 7.0, temperature 30°C, and fermentation time in 15 days. However, the highest biomass dry weight (40 g/kg wet substrate) and sugar utilization (90%) were obtained in cultures grown at 35°C. The addition of 6% (w/w) methanol into substrate increased the concentration of citric and gluconic acid from 64 and 490 to 96 and 685 g/kg dry fig, respectively. Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology (2000) 25, 298–304. Received 15 April 2000/ Accepted in revised form 11 August 2000  相似文献   

7.
In this study, diluted and fortified carrot juice was used for modelling and optimization of citric acid production by a new mutant strain, Yarrowia lipolytica K-168. Protein concentrate obtained from fine flour -a byproduct of semolina production- was used as a nitrogen source in the fermentation medium. Interactive effects of selected independent variables, initial total sugar concentration, initial pH, initial concentration of protein concentrate obtained from fine flour of semolina and temperature, on the growth and citric acid production of the yeast were investigated. An experimental design including 30 experiments was conducted by using the method of central composite design. Modelling the effects of these independent variables on maximum citric acid concentration, maximum citric acid production rate, citric acid yield, the ratio of maximum citric acid concentration to maximum isocitric acid concentration and specific growth rate were performed by response surface methodology. The variations of all of the responses with the independent variables were defined by a quadratic model. Numeric optimization was performed by using the desireability function. The conditions with 190.83 g/L initial sugar concentration, 5.90 initial pH, 0.07 g/L initial concentration of fine flour protein concentrate and 27.86 °C were determined as optimal conditions for citric acid production. The maximum citric acid concentration reached to 80.53 g/L in optimal conditions.  相似文献   

8.
The influence of some fermentation parameters on the semi-pilot scale (alteration of growth conditions,e.g., sugar concentration, incubation temperature and initial pH) on citrate production was demonstrated in parent and mutant strains ofAspergillus niger. Raw material from sugar industry (cane molasses) was examined as basal fermentation medium in a stirred stainless-steel 15-L fermentor. After growth on medium with 150 g/L sugar, the parent strain produced 51.2 g/L citric acid; the mutant strain achieved production maximum of 96.2 g/L. Comparing the growth, kinetic (volumetric substrate uptake rate, rate of substrate consumption and volumetric productivity rate) and production parameters it was found that the mutant strain grows more rapidly, with slightly changed morphology (intermediate, shiny round pellets with diameter 0.6–0.7 mm), and exhibits a higher citrate production and higher efficiency of sugar utilization.  相似文献   

9.
A laboratory-scale study was conducted to evaluate the feasibility of using palm oil mill effluent (POME) as a major substrate and other nutrients for maximum production of citric acid using the potential fungal strain Aspergillus niger (A103). Statistical optimization of medium composition (substrate–POME, co-substrates–wheat flour and glucose, and nitrogen source–ammonium nitrate) and fermentation time was carried out by central composite design (CCD) to develop a polynomial regression model through the effects of linear, quadratic, and interaction of the factors. The statistical analysis of the results showed that, in the range studied, ammonium nitrate had no significant effect whereas substrate, co-substrates and fermentation time had significant effects on citric acid production. The optimized medium containing 2% (w/w) of substrate concentration (POME), 4% (w/w) of wheat flour concentration, 4% (w/w) of glucose concentration, 0% (w/v) of ammonium nitrate and 5 days fermentation time gave the maximum predicted citric acid of 5.37 g/l which was found to be 1.5 g/l in the experimental run. The determination of coefficient (R 2) from the analysis observed was 0.964, indicating a satisfactory adjustment of the model with the response. The analysis showed that the major substrate POME (P < 0.05), glucose (P < 0.01), nutrient (P < 0.05), and fermentation time (P < 0.01) was more significant for citric acid production. The bioconversion of POME for citric acid production using optimal conditions showed the higher removal of chemical oxygen demand (82%) with the production of citric acid (5.2 g/l) on the final day of fermentation process (7 days). The pH and biosolids accumulation were observed during the bioconversion process.  相似文献   

10.
In this work, sequential optimization strategy, based on statistical designs, was employed to enhance the production of citric acid in submerged culture. For screening of fermentation medium composition significantly influencing citric acid production, the two-level Plackett-Burman design was used. Under our experimental conditions, beet molasses and corn steep liquor were found to be the major factors of the acid production. A near optimum medium formulation was obtained using this method with increased citric acid yield by five-folds. Response surface methodology (RSM) was adopted to acquire the best process conditions. In this respect, the three-level Box-Behnken design was applied. A polynomial model was created to correlate the relationship between the three variables (beet molasses, corn steep liquor and inoculum concentration) and citric acid yield. Estimated optimum composition for the production of citric acid is as follows pretreated beet molasses, 240.1g/l; corn steep liquor, 10.5g/l; and spores concentration, 10(8)spores/ml. The optimum citric acid yield was 87.81% which is 14 times than the basal medium. The five level central composite design was used for outlining the optimum values of the fermentation factors initial pH, aeration rate and temperature on citric acid production. Estimated optimum values for the production of citric acid are as follows initial pH 4.0; aeration rate, 6500ml/min and fermentation temperature, 31.5 degrees C.  相似文献   

11.
In the present report, the effect of glucose and stearin (substrate composed by saturated free-fatty acids) on the production of biomass, reserve lipid, and citric acid by Yarrowia lipolytica ACA-DC 50109 was investigated in nitrogen-limited cultures. Numerical models that were used in order to quantify the kinetic behavior of the above Yarrowia lipolytica strain showed successful simulation, while the optimized parameter values were similar to those experimentally measured and the predictive ability of the models was satisfactory. In nitrogen-limited cultures in which glucose was used as the sole substrate, satisfactory growth and no glucose inhibition occurred, although in some cases the initial concentration of glucose was significantly high (150 g/l). Citric acid production was observed in all trials, which was in some cases notable (final concentration 42.9 g/l, yield 0.56 g per g of sugar consumed). The concentration of unsaturated cellular fatty acids was slightly lower when the quantity of sugar in the medium was elevated. In the cases in which stearin and glucose were used as co-substrates, in spite of the fact that the quantity of cellular lipid inside the yeast cells varied remarkably (from 0.3 to 2.0 g/l – 4 to 20% wt/wt), de novo fatty acid biosynthesis was observed. This activity increased when the yeast cells assimilated higher sugar quantities. The citric acid produced was mainly derived from the catabolism of sugar. Nevertheless, citric acid yield on sugar consumed and citrate specific production rate, as evaluated by the numerical model, presented substantially higher values in the fermentation in which no fat was used as glucose co-substrate compared with the cultures with stearin used as co-substrate.  相似文献   

12.
Spore suspensions of Aspergillus niger GCB 75, which produced 31.1 g/l citric acid from 15% sugars in molasses, were subjected to u.v.-induced mutagenesis. Among three variants, GCM 45 was found to be the best citric acid producer and was further improved by chemical mutagenesis using NTG. Out of 3 deoxy-D-glucose-resistant variants, GCM 7 was selected as the best mutant which produced 86.1 ± 1.5 g/l citric acid after 168 h of fermentation of potassium ferricyanide + H2SO4-pretreated black strap molasses (containing 150 g sugars/l) in Vogel's medium. On the basis of comparison of kinetic parameters, namely the volumetric substrate uptake rate (Q s), and specific substrate uptake rate (q s), the volumetric productivity, theoretical yield and specific product formation rate, it was observed that the mutants were faster growing organisms and had the ability to overproduce citric acid.  相似文献   

13.
Citric acid (CA) is the most important commercial product which is produced by using various sugar substrates in the terrestrial environment. The present study made an attempt to produce citric acid by the fungal strain Aspergillus niger from red seaweed Gelidiella acerosa is the best alternative to sugar substrate in the marine environment. In this study three types of production media were prepared including control (sucrose) by following standard fermentation conditions. The acid production was indicated by the reduction of pH levels. The control medium gave the highest yield of 80 g/l at pH 1.5 and the medium containing crude seaweed powder and other compositions gave the yield of 30 g/l at pH 3.5 whereas the medium containing crude seaweed and 10% sucrose gave the yield of 50 g/l at pH 3.0. When calculating the benefit cost ratio, crude seaweed powder and 10% sucrose yielded 50 g of citric acid at the lower cost of Rs. 35, whereas the other two media gave the yield of 80 and 30 g respectively with the cost of Rs. 77 and 28. In economic point of view, the medium containing seaweed and 10% sucrose showed more benefit with lower cost.  相似文献   

14.
Sun ZY  Tang YQ  Iwanaga T  Sho T  Kida K 《Bioresource technology》2011,102(23):10929-10935
An efficient process for the production of fuel ethanol from bamboo that consisted of hydrolysis with concentrated sulfuric acid, removal of color compounds, separation of acid and sugar, hydrolysis of oligosaccharides and subsequent continuous ethanol fermentation was developed. The highest sugar recovery efficiency was 81.6% when concentrated sulfuric acid hydrolysis was carried out under the optimum conditions. Continuous separation of acid from the saccharified liquid after removal of color compounds with activated carbon was conducted using an improved simulated moving bed (ISMB) system, and 98.4% of sugar and 90.5% of acid were recovered. After oligosaccharide hydrolysis and pH adjustment, the unsterilized saccharified liquid was subjected to continuous ethanol fermentation using Saccharomycescerevisiae strain KF-7. The ethanol concentration, the fermentation yield based on glucose and the ethanol productivity were approximately 27.2 g/l, 92.0% and 8.2 g/l/h, respectively. These results suggest that the process is effective for production of fuel ethanol from bamboo.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The central aspect of this work was to investigate the influence of nitrogen feed rate at constant C/N ratio on continuous citric acid fermentation by Candida oleophila ATCC 20177. Medium ammonia nitrogen and glucose concentrations influenced growth and production. Space-time yield (STY) meaning volumetric productivity, biomass specific productivity (BSP), product concentration, product selectivity and citrate/isocitrate ratio increased with increasing residence time (RT). BSP increased in an exponential mode lowering nitrogen feed rates. Highest BSP for citric acid of 0.13 g/(g h) was achieved at lowest NH4Cl concentration of 1.5 g/l and highest STY (1.2 g/l h) with 3 g NH4Cl/l at a RT of 25 h. Citric acid 74.2 g/l were produced at 58 h RT and 6 g NH4Cl/l. Glucose uptake rate seems to be strictly controlled by growth rate of the yeast cells. Optimum nitrogen concentration and adapted C/N ratio are essential for successful continuous citric acid fermentation. The biomass-specific nitrogen feed rate is the most important factor influencing continuous citric acid production by yeasts. Numerous chemostat experiments showed the feasibility of continuous citrate production by yeasts.  相似文献   

16.
The present study describes the use of vermiculite for enhanced citric acid productivity by a mutant strain of Aspergillus niger NGGCB-101 in a stirred bioreactor of 15.0 l capacity. The maximum amount of citric acid (96.10 g/l) was obtained with the control 144 h after mycelial inoculation. To enhance citric acid production, varying levels of vermiculite were added as an additive into the fermentation medium. The best results were observed when 0.20 g/l vermiculite was added into the medium 24 h after inoculation resulting in the production of 146.88 g citric acid monohydrate/l. The dry cell mass and residual sugar were 11.75 and 55.90 g/l, respectively. Mixed mycelial pellets (1.08–1.28 mm, dia) were observed in the fermented culture broth. When the culture grown at different vermiculite levels was monitored for Q p , Q s and q p , there was a significant enhancement (P 0.05) in these variables over the control (vermiculite-free). Based on these results, it is concluded that vermiculite might affect mycelial morphology and subsequent TCA cycle performance to improve carbon source utilization by the mould, basic parameters for high performance citric acid fermentation.  相似文献   

17.
Aspergillus niger CFTRI 30 produced 1.3 g citric acid/10 g dry coffee husk in 72 h solid-state fermentation when the substrate was moistened with 0.075 M NaOH solution. Production was increased by 17% by adding a mixture of iron, copper and zinc to the medium but enrichment of the moist solid medium with (NH4)2SO4, sucrose or any of four enzymes did not improve production. The production of about 1.5 g citric acid/10 g dry coffee husk at a conversion of 82% (based on sugar consumed) under standardized conditions demonstrates the commercial potential of using the husk in this way.The authors are with the Department of Microbiology and Bioengineering, Central Food Technological Research Institute, Mysore-570 013, India;  相似文献   

18.
The fermentation of hemicellulosic hydrolysate from Pinus taeda chips, using the fungal culture Rhizopus oryzae, was carried out to produce l-(+)-lactic acid and to optimize and enhance the biological conversion of reducing sugar into l-(+)-lactic acid using the experimental design to evaluate the culture conditions. The first factorial design based on surface response with five factors (agitation level, substrate concentration, CaCO3 concentration, C/N and C/P ratios) at low levels and one medium point was performed to optimize culture conditions. The second study tested two factors (substrate concentration and C/N ratio) at three levels. The statistical analysis of the data obtained from the factorial study showed that a C/N ratio of 35 and substrate concentration of 90 g/litre were the best conditions to produce l-(+)-lactic acid with R. oryzae on P. taeda hydrolysate, but in this case the statistical projection was not correct and the real optimized conditions were C/N ratio of 55 and substrate concentration of 75 g/litre of reducing sugar.  相似文献   

19.
Summary A flocculent strain of Zymomonas mobilis was used for ethanol production from sucrose. Using a fermentor with cell recycle (internal and external settler) high sugar conversion and ethanol productivity were obtained. At a dilution rate of 0.5 h-1 (giving 96% sugar conversion) the ethanol productivity, yield and concentrations respectively were 20 g/l/h, 0.45 g/g and 40 g/l using a medium containing 100 g/l sucrose. At a sucrose concentration of 150 g/l, the ethanol concentration reached 60 g/l. The ethanol yield was 80% theoretical due to levan and fructo-oligomer formation. No sorbitol was detected. This fermentation was conducted at a range of conditions from 30 to 36°C and from pH 4.0 to 5.5.  相似文献   

20.
A two-stage process of submerged citric acid fermentation with replacement of growth medium by fermentation medium has been worked out. The optimum composition of mineral nutrients and pH of the fermentation medium of the second stage of the process were determined. An addition of 0.5 g/l of NH4NO3 as nitrogen source and 0.1 g/l of MgSO4-7H2O as magnesium source ensured effective conversion of sucrose to citric acid. An addition to KH2PO4, on the other hand, was definitely unfavourable as it considerably reduced the product yield. The medium for the second stage of fermentation should be acidified to about pH 2.2, while the water used for washing the mycelium from the remains of the growth medium should have a pH of 2.5--3.5. Under these conditions, with an initial sucrose concentration of 100 g/l, after 132 hr fermentation at 26 degrees up to 90 g/l of citric acid was obtained, which corresponds to a productivity of over 16 g/l. day. The highest activity for citric acid formation was found in three- or four-day-old mycelium.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号