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1.
Summary The hydrodynamics and mass transfer behaviour of an airlift fermentor with an external loop (height 10m) has been investigated by measuring gas and liquid velocities, gas hold-up, liquid mixing and oxygen transfer coefficients. Liquid phase properties, i.e., ionic strength, viscosity and surface tension have been varied by altering the fermentation media. Results are compared with those from bubble column experiments performed in the same unit. It is shown, that more uniform two-phase flow in the airlift leads to advantages in scale-up and operation.Nomenclature a Specific interfacial area per volume of dispersion (m2/m3) - c Local concentration of tracer (kmol/m3) - c Concentration of tracer at infinite time (kmol/m3) - CL Concentration of oxygen in the liquid bulk (kmol/m3) - CL * Concentration of oxygen in the interface (kmol/m3) - Dax Axial dispersion coefficient (cm2/s) - I Ionic strength (kmol/m3) - i Inhomogeneity [defined in Eq. (2)] - Rate of oxygen transfer (kmol/s) - tc Circulation time (s) - tM Mixing time (s) - VR Volume of gas-liquid dispersion (m3) - VSG Superficial gas velocity in up-flow column (m/s) Greek letter symbols L Oxygen transfer coefficient (m/s) - Dynamic viscosity (m Pa s) - Surface tension (m N/m) Presented at the First European Congress on Biotechnology, Interlaken, September 25–29, 1978  相似文献   

2.
The scale-down procedure seems an adequate tool in the design, optimization and scale-up fermentation processes. The first step in this procedure is a theoretical analysis, called process analysis, which is based on characteristic times of the mechanisms which may influence the performance of the bioreactor. This analysis must give information about the behaviour of large and small scale fermentation processes. At a small scale a verification of the results of such an analysis of the fed-batch baker's yeast production is carried out.In this paper a comparison of calculated and measured characteristic times of liquid mixing and mass transfer is presented. It was concluded that the literature correlations give a rough estimation of the characteristic times and can be used in the process analysis. Depending on the kind of sparger, the medium and the scale of the reactor, more knowledge is needed about bubble coalescence in fermentation media.The volumetric oxygen transfer coefficient increased when the biomass concentration increased. Probably this is caused by the interaction between biomass and the anti-foaming agent used.List of Symbols C kg/m3 concentration - D m diameter - m2/s effective dispersion coefficient - d m holes of the sparger - g m/s2 gravitational acceleration - H m height - k L a s–1 volumetric mass transfer coefficient based on the liquid volume - L m length - m kg/kg gas liquid distribution coefficient - OTR kg/(m3 · s) oxygen transfer rate - OUR kg/(m3 · s) oxygen uptake rate - t s time - s m/s superficial gas flow rate - m length - s time constant - g m3/s gas flow rate Indices 0 value at t=0 - cal calculated - e value at t=t (end) - g gas phase - in flow going to the fermentor - l liquid phase - m mixing - mt mass transfer - O 2 oxygen - out flow coming out the fermentor  相似文献   

3.
Summary A new, fast method is described to determine kLa either off-line, or on-line during animal-cell cultivation. Since it does not need the equilibrium concentration of oxygen in the liquid phase (C*), it is not required to await a new steady state. Furthermore, the results do not depend on the calibration value of the dissolved-oxygen probe. The method yielded accurate values for kLa, both for an oxygen-consuming and a non-consuming system.Nomenclature C L Dissolved-oxygen concentration [mol·m-3] - C * C L in equilibrium with the oxygen concentration in the gas phase [mol·m-3] - C L, Equilibrium oxygen concentration at stationary conditions [mol·m-3] - kLa Volumetric oxygen transfer coefficient [s-1] - r Specific oxygen consumption of biomass [mol·cell-1·s-1] - X Cell concentration [cells·m-3] - t Time [s] - Noise of dissolved-oxygen probe [mol·m-3] - Absolute error of kLa-measurement [s-1]  相似文献   

4.
The batch productivity (Q TM) of the production of the nucleoside antibiotic toyocamycin (TM) by Streptomyces chrestomyceticus was increased ten-fold by selection of a UV generated mutant, optimization of pH, increasing incubation temperature from 28 °C to 36 °C, and addition of soy oil. Initial high oxygen transfer rates stimulated Q TM maxima two-fold. Antibiotic production by the mutant strain, U190, however, appeared more shear sensitive than the parent culture FCRF 341 with maximum antibiotic titer being inversely related to impellor tip velocity, T v . For this reason, scale-up could not be done at constant P/V or constant volumetric oxygen transfer. Instead, programming of impeller speed was evaluated in order to maintain optimal impeller tip velocity during scale-up. It was found that a low constant T v maintained in scale-up in geometrically similar vessels was most beneficial for duplication of optimal antibiotic productivity, Q TM. Pilot fermentations (120 dm3 scale) were used to determine coefficients of Q TM variation from oxygen uptake rate (OUR) and total CO2 evolution data for monitoring of Q TM variation during scale-up to the 12,000 dm3 scale. This technique allowed for on-line prediction of antibiotic titer and Q TM from fermentor exhaust gas data.List of Symbols A scale constant - B shape constant - C location of maximum constant - D m impeller diameter (m) - H m liquid height (m) - OTR MmolO2·(dm3)–1min–1 oxygen transfer rate - OUR MmolO2·(dm3)–1min–1 oxygen uptake rate - PCV cm3 packed cell volume - P/V watts/dm3 volumetric power consumption - Q 1 · min–1 corrected to standard conditions of temperature, pressure aeration rate - Q TM g/(cm3 · h) or kg/(m3 · h) antibiotic productivity - T m tank diameter - T mix s mixing time - T v cm · s–1 impeller tip velocity - TM g/cm3 Toyocamycin concentration - TNP Tricyclic nucleoside phosphate  相似文献   

5.
The scale-down procedure can be used to optimize and scale up fermentation processes. The first step in this procedure, a theoretical analysis of the process at a large scale, must give information about the regime, or bottle necks, ruling the process. In order to verify the theoretical results the process analysis has been applied to the fed-batch baker's yeast production at a laboratory scale. The results of this analysis are compared with results from fed-batch experiments. It was concluded that if only one mechanism is ruling the process, for instance mass transfer, the results of the analysis are quite clear. If more than one mechanism is important, for example mass transfer and liquid mixing, additional knowledge is needed to predict the behaviour of the process.Concerning the baker's yeast production, it was concluded that if oxygen limitation occurs, liquid mixing is of little importance.List of Symbols C kg/m3 concentration - C * kg/m3 saturation concentration - D m diameter - D E m2/s effective dispersion coefficient - d m holes of the sparger - F sm3/s substrate flow to the fermentor - g m/s2 gravitational acceleration - H m height - k La s–1 volumetric mass transfer coefficient based on the liquid volume - L m length - m skg/(kg·s) maintenance coefficient - OTR kg/(m3·s) oxygen transfer rate - OUR kg/(m3·s) oxygen uptake rate - r kg/(m3·s) reaction rate - t s time - V m3 volume - v m/s velocity - v sm/s superficial gas flow rate - y ijkg/kg yield of componentj oni - s–1 specific growth rate - s time constant - gm3/s gas flow rate Indices 0 value att=0 - cir liquid circulation - e ethanol - f feed concentration - g gas phase - in flow going to the fermentor - l liquid phase - m mixing - mt mass transfer - o, O2 oxygen - oc oxygen consumption - out flow coming out the fermentor - s substrate - sa substrate addition - sc substrate consumption - x biomass  相似文献   

6.
A pilot scale airlift reactor with multiple net draft tubes was developed to improve oxygen transfer in the reactor. The reactor was 0.29 m in diameter and 2 m height. A steadystate sulfite oxidation method was applied to determine an overall volumetric mass transfer coefficient. Oxygen transfer of the proposed airlift reactor can be 60–100% higher than that of bubble columns under the same operating conditions.List of Symbols C * mol·dm–3 saturated concentration of dissolved oxygen - C L mol·dm–3 bulk concentration of dissolved oxygen - G mol/min nitrogen flow rate - k L a hr–1 the volumetric gas-liquid mass transfer coefficient - Mo 2 g/mol molecular weight of oxygen - OTR g/min the oxygen transfer rate - U g cm/s superficial air velocity - V L dm3 volume of the liquid phase - in oxygen mole ratio in the inlet gas - out oxygen mole ratio in the outlet gas  相似文献   

7.
A comprehensive methodology is presented for the design of reactors using immobilized enzymes as catalysts. The design is based on material balances and rate equations for enzyme action and decay and considers the effect of mass transfer limitations on the expression of enzyme activity. The enzymatic isomerization of glucose into fructose with a commercial immobilized glucose isomerase was selected as a case study. Results obtained are consistent with data obtained from existing high-fructose syrup plants. The methodology may be extended to other cases, provided sound expressions for enzyme action and decay are available and a simple flow pattern within the reactor might be assumed.List of Symbols C kat/kg specific activity of the catalyst - D m2/s substrate diffusivity within the catalyst particle - Dr m reactor diameter - d d operating time of each reactor - E kat initial enzyme activity - E i kat initial enzyme activity in each reactor - F m3/s process flowrate - F i m3/s reactor feed flowrate at a given time - F 0 m3/s initial feed flowrate to each reactor - H number of enzyme half-lives used in the reactors - K mole/m3 equilibrium constant - K S mole/m3 Michaelis constant for substrate - K P mole/m3 Michaelis constant for product - K m mole/m3 apparent Michaelis constant f(K, K s, Kp, s0) - k mole/s · kat reaction rate constant - k d d–1 first-order thermal inactivation rate constant - L m reactor height - L r m height of catalyst bed - N R number of reactors - P i kg catalyst weight in each reactor - p mole/m3 product concentration - R m particle radius - R P ratio of minimum to maximum process flowrate - r m distance to the center of the spherical particle - s mole/m3 substrate concentration - s 0i mole/m3 substrate concentration at reactor inlet - s 0 mole/m3 bulk substrate concentration - s mole/m3 apparent substrate concentration - T K temperature - t d time - t i d operating time for reactor i - t s d time elapsed between two successive charges of each reactor - V m3 reactor volumen - V m mole/m3 s maximum apparent reaction rate - V p mole/m3 s maximum reaction rate for product - V R m3 actual volume of catalyst bed - V r m3 calculated volume of catalyst bed - V S mol/m3 s maximum reaction rate for substrate - v mol/m3 s initial reaction rate - v i m/s linear velocity - v m mol/m3 s apparent initial reaction rate f(Km, s,Vm) - X substrate conversion - X eq substrate conversion at equilibrium - =s/K dimensionless substrate concentration - 0=s0/K bulk dimensionless substrate concentration - eq=seq/K dimensionless substrate concentration at equilibrium - local effectiveness factor - mean integrated effectiveness factor - Thiéle modulus - =r/R dimensionless radius - s kg/m3 hydrated support density - substrate protection factor - s residence time  相似文献   

8.
Summary The influence of the concentration of oxygen on lipase production by the fungus Rhizopus delemar was studied in different fermenters. The effect of oxygen limitation ( 47 mol/l) on lipase production by R. delemar is large as could be demonstrated in pellet and filamentous cultures. A model is proposed to describe the extent of oxygen limitation in pellet cultures. Model estimates indicate that oxygen is the limiting substrate in shake flask cultures and that an optimal inoculum size for oxygen-dependent processes can occur.Low oxygen concentrations greatly negatively affect the metabolism of R. delemar, which could be shown by cultivation in continuous cultures in filamentous growth form (Doptimal=0.086 h-1). Continuous cultivations of R. delemar at constant, low-oxygen concentrations are a useful tool to scale down fermentation processes in cases where a transient or local oxygen limitation occurs.Symbols and Abbreviations CO Oxygen concentration in the gas phase at time = 0 (kg·m-3) - CO 2i Oxygen concentration at the pellet liquid interface (kg·m-3) - CO 2i Oxygen concentration in the bulk (kg·m-3) - D Dilution rate (h-1) - IDO 2 Diffusion coefficient for oxygen (m2·s-1) - dw Dry weight of biomass (kg) - f Conversion factor (rs O 2 to oxygen consumption rate per m3) (-) - k Radial growth rate (m·s-1) - K Constant - kla Volumetric mass transfer coefficient (s-1) - klA Oxygen transfer rate (m-3·s-1) - kl Mass transfer coefficient (m·s-1) - K O 2 Affinity constant for oxygen (mol·m-3) - K w Cotton plug resistance (m-3·s-1) - M Henry coefficient (-) - NV Number of pellets per volume (m-3) - R Radius (m) - RO Radius of oxygen-deficient core (m) - RQ Respiration quotient (mol CO2/mol O2) - rs O 2 Specific oxygen consumption rate per dry weight biomass (kg O2·s-1[kg dw]-1) - rX Biomass production rate (kg·m-3·s-1) - SG Soytone glucose medium (for shake flask experiments) - SG 4 Soytone glucose medium (for tower fermenter and continuous culture experiments) - V Volume of medium (m-3) - X Biomass (dry weight) concentration (kg·m-3) - XR o Biomass concentration within RO for a given X (kg·m-3) - Y O 2 Biomass yield calculated on oxygen (kg dw/kg O2) - Thiele modulus - Efficiency factor =1-(RO/R)3 (-) - Growth rate (m-1·s-1·kg1/3) - Dry weight per volume of pellet (kg·m-3)  相似文献   

9.
Stirred tank (STR), bubble column (BCR) and airlift (ALR) bioreactors of 0.05 and 1.5 m3 total volume were compared for the production of 2,3-butanediol using Enterobacter aerogenes under microaerobic conditions. Batch fermentations were carried out at constant oxygen transfer rate (OTR=35 mmol/lh). At 0.05 m3 scale, the STR reactor achieved much higher biomass and product concentrations than the BCR and ALR reactors. At 1.5 m3 scale, however, exactly the same biomass and product concentrations could be obtained in both STR and ALR reactors. The 1.5 m3 ALR reactor performed also much better than its counterpart at small scale, achieving a productivity 2.4-fold as high as that of the 0.05 m3 BCL and ALR reactors. No differences in performances were observed between BCR and ALR. As compared to STR the tower reactors have a 12 time higher energetic efficiency (referred to product formation) and thus should be the choice for large scale production of 2,3-butanediol.The criterion of constant OTR or constant k L a is not applicable for the scale-up of this oxygen-sensitive culture due to strong influence of reactor hydrodynamics under microaerobic conditions. The effects of mixing and circulation time on growth and metabolism of E. aerogenes were quantitatively studied in scaled-down experiments with continuous culture. For a successful scale-up of this microaerobic culture it is necessary to have an homogeneous oxygen supply over the entire reactor volume. Under conditions of inhomogeneous oxygen supply an optimum liquid circulation time exists which gives a maximum production of 2,3-butanediol.List of Symbols BD 2,3-butanediol - [mmol/l] saturation value of dissolved oxygen - D [h–1] dilution rate - D [mm] reactor diameter - D K [mm] top section diameter - D R [mm] stirrer diameter - D S [mm] draft tube diameter - EtOH ethanol - E P [kg/kWh] energy efficiency refered to product formation - H [mm] height of reactor - HAc acetate - H L [mm] height of liquid - k L a [h–1] volumetric oxygen transfer coefficient - N [rpm=min–1] stirrer speed - OTR [mmol/lh] oxygen transfer rate - OUR [mmol/lh] oxygen uptake rate - p [Pa] pressure - P [kW] power input - P/V L [kW/m3] specific power input - [mmHg] oxygen partial pressure (mmHg) or - [mmol/l] dissolved oxygen (mmol/l) - [mmol/gh] specific oxygen uptake rate - q P [mmol/gh] specific productivity - R [Nm/kgK] gas constant, R = 287.06 - RQ respiration quotient - t c [s] liquid circulation time - T [°C or K] temperature - TCA tricarboxylic acid - u G [cm/s] mean superficial gas velocity - v G [m/s] gas velocity at nozzels of gas distributor - VG [l/h] aeration rate at inlet - V [m3 or l] total volume - V L [m3 or l] liquid volume - V N [l/mol] gas mole volume under normal conditions, V N = 24.4116 - X [g/l] biomass concentration - CO2 mole fraction in the effluent gas - O2 mole fraction in the effluent gas - inlet (above the gas distributor) - ratio of oxygen consumed through TCA cycle to the total oxygen uptake rate - [g/l or kg/m3] density - [%] degree homogeneity - outlet of fermenter or top of the dispersion phase Dedicated to the 65th birthday of Professor Fritz Wagner.We thank Dr. C. Posten and T. Gabel for support with the computer control system UBICON. T.-G. Byun gratefully acknowledges financial support by DAAD.  相似文献   

10.
The gas phase holdup and mass transfer characteristics of carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) solutions in a bubble column having a radial gas sparger have been determined and a new flow regime map has been proposed. The gas holdup increases with gas velocity in the bubbly flow regime, decreases in the churn-turbulent flow regime, and increases again in the slug flow regime. The volumetric mass transfer coefficient (k La) significantly decreases with increasing liquid viscosity. The gas holdup and k La values in the present bubble column of CMC solutions are found to be much higher than those in bubble columns or external-loop airlift columns with a plate-type sparger. The obtained gas phase holdup ( g) and k La data have been correlated with pertinent dimensionless groups in both the bubbly and the churn-turbulent flow regimes.List of Symbols a m–1 specific gas-liquid interfacial area per total volume - A d m2 cross-sectional area of downcomer - A r m2 cross-sectional area of riser - d b m individual bubble diameter - d vs m Sauter mean bubble diameter - D c m column diameter - D L m2/s oxygen diffusivity in the liquid - Fr Froude number, U g/(g Dc)1/2 - g m/s2 gravitational acceleration - G a Galileo number, gD c 3 2/2 app - H a m aerated liquid height - H c m unaerated liquid height - K Pa · sn fluid consistency index - k L a s–1 volumetric mass transfer coefficient - n flow behavior index - N i number of bubbles having diameter d bi - Sc Schmidt number, app/( D L) - Sh Sherwood number, k L a D c 2 /DL - U sg m/s superficial gas velocity - U gr m/s superficial riser gas velocity - V a m3 aerated liquid volume - V c m3 unaerated liquid volume - N/m surface tension of the liquid phase - g gas holdup - app Pa · s effective viscosity of non-Newtonian liquid - kg/m3 liquid density - ý s–1 shear rate - Pa shear stress  相似文献   

11.
Experiments were conducted in a packed bed bio-reactor consisting of entrapped yeast cells in alginate matrix for continuous production of alcohol. The variables include initial substrate level, reactor diameter, diameter of the bead and residence time. The influence of these parameters on the conversion of substrate was studied. The film and pore diffusional effects were observed by varying the column and bead diameters, respectively. The pseudo first order reaction rate constant was calculated and correlated with the bead diameter. The effectiveness factor and the Thiele modulus were estimated. A correlation was proposed for fractional conversion in terms of operating variables. It is possible to predict the residence time required and volumetric productivity achieved in a bioreactor for any given initial substrate concentration at any fractional conversion obtained.List of Symbols a m m2/kg surface are per unit mass of catalyst particle - D m diameter of the reactor - D e m2/s effective diffusivity - d m particle diameter - h m bed height - k m/s first order reaction rate constant - k m3/(kg · s) pseudo first order reaction rate constant - k in m3/(kg · s) intrinsic reaction rate constant, (=K/gh) - k m m/s mass transfer coefficient - P kmol/(m3 · s) volumetric productivity - Q m3/s flow rate of the feed - S kmol/m3 substrate concentration at any time - S o kmol/m3 initial substrate concentration - S p kmol/m3 substrate concentration on the gel bead surface - t s reaction time - T (kg · cat · s)/m3 space time (weight of the biocatalyst/flow rate of the feed) - v kmol/(kg · cat · s) reaction rate - V pfr m3 volume of the packed bed reactor - X [1-(S/S o)] fraction of the substrate converted in to product Greek Symbols effectiveness factor - Thiele modulus - kg/m3 density of the catalyst particle - s residence time, (= D2 h/4Q) - voidage  相似文献   

12.
The effectiveness of using micro-gel bead-immobilized cells for aerobic processes was investigated. Glutamine production by Corynebacterium glutamicum, 9703-T, cells was used as an example. The cells were immobilized in Sr-alginate micro-gel beads 500 m in diameter and used for fermentation processes in a stirred tank reactor with a modified impeller at 400 min–1. Continuous production of glutamine was carried out for more than 220 h in this reactor and no gel breakage was observed. As a result of the high oxygen transfer capacity of this system, the glutamine yield from glucose was more than three times higher, while the organic acid accumulation was more than 24 times lower than those obtained with 3.0 mm-gel bead-immobilized cells in an airlift fermentor under similar experimental conditions. During the continuous fermentations there was evolution and proliferation of non-glutamine producing strains which led to a gradual decrease in the productivity of the systems. Although a modified production medium which suppresses cell growth during the production phase was effective in maintaining the productivity, the stability of the whole system was shortened due to high cell deactivation rate in such a medium.List of Symbols C kg/m3 glutamine concentration - C A mol/m 3 local oxygen concentration inside the gel beads - C AS mol/m 3 oxygen concentration at the surface of the gel beads - De m2/h effective diffusion coefficient of oxygen in the gel bead - DO mol/m3 dissolved oxygen concentration - F dm3/h medium flow rate - K h–1 glutamine decomposition rate constant - Km mol/m3 Michaelis Menten constant - QO 2max mol/(kg · h) maximum specific respiration rate - R m radius of the gel beads - r m radial distance - t h time - V C dm 3 volume of the gel beads - V L dm 3 liquid volume in the reactor - Vm mol/(m3 · h) maximum respiration rate - X kg/m3 cell concentration - x r/R - y C A /CAS - h–1 cell deactivation rate constant - Thiele modulus defined by R(Vm/De Km) 1/2 - C AS /Km - C kg/(m3-gel · h) specific glutamine formation rate - c dm3-gel/dm3 V C /V L   相似文献   

13.
Cultivation of Brevibacterium divaricatum for glutamic acid production in an airlift reactor with net draft tube was developed. Cell concentration gave an index for adding penicillin G. On-line estimation of total sugar concentration yielded an identified model which was used for determination of the substrate addition. Fermentation for glutamic acid production requires high oxygen concentration in the broth. The proposed reactor has the capability to provide sufficient oxygen for the fermentation. Since the reactor is suitable for fed-batch culture, the cultivation of B. divaricatum for glutamic acid production in the proposed reactor is successfully carried out.List of Symbols a system parameter - b system parameter - C c,in mole fraction carbon dioxide in the gas inlet - C c,out mole fraction carbon dioxide in the gas outlet - C L mole/dm3 oxygen concentration in liquid phase - C L * mole/dm3 saturated oxygen concentration in liquid phase - C 0,in mole fraction of oxygen in the gas inlet - C 0,out mole fraction of oxygen in the gas outlet - CPR mole/h/dm3 carbon dioxide production rate based on total broth - E(t) error signal - F in mole/h inlet gas flow rate - k 1 constant defined by Eq. (4) - k 2 constant defined by Eq. (5) - k L a 1/h volumetric mass transfer coefficient of gas-liquid phase - OUR mole/h/dm3 oxygen uptake rate based on total broth - P atm pressure in the reactor - t h time - TS c g total sugar consumption - TS s g/dm3 set point of total sugar concentration - TS * g/dm3 reference value of total sugar concentration - TS(t) g/dm3 total sugar concentration in the broth at timet - u(t) cm3/min feed rate at timet - V dm3 total broth volume - VVM (dm3/min)/dm3 flow rate per unit liquid volume - a negative constant defined by Eq. (7)  相似文献   

14.
Summary The effect of soybean oil on the volumetric oxygen transfer coefficient during the cultivation ofAerobacter aerogenes cells is presented. For our aeration-agitation conditions (0.278 vvm and 500 rpm), it has been demonstrated that the use 19% (v/v) of soybean oil enabled a 1.85-fold increase of thek l a coefficient (calculated on a per liter aqueous phase basis). For smaller volumetric oil fractions,k L a increased linearly with the oil loading. Because of the oxygen-vector properties of soybean oil, this oil is able to significantly increase thek L a of a bioreactor.Nomenclature C*, C saturation and actual dissolved oxygen concentrations respectively (g/m3) - KLa volumetric oxygen transfer coefficient (h–1) - KLainitial k La measured before the oil addition (h–1) - MO2 molar mass of oxygen (dalton) - N oxygen transfer rate (g/m3. h) - PO2. PN2 partial pressures ofO 2 andN 2 in the gas (atm) - PH2OT partial pressure of water in air at the temperatureT (atm) - PT total pressure (atm) - Q0 volumetric flow rate of outlet air before seeding (m3/h) - Sp spreading coefficient (dynes/cm) - T absolute temperature of outlet gas (K) - Vi volume of the liquidi in the fermentor (m3) - VM molar volume at 273 K and 1 atm (m3/mole) - ij interfacial tension betweeni andj componants (dynes/cm) - v volumetric fraction of the oil (v/v) - G gas - O oil - W water - i inlet - o outlet  相似文献   

15.
Studies in tower reactors with viscous liquids on flow regime, effective shear rate, liquid mixing, gas holdup and gas/ liquid mass transfer (k La) are reviewed. Additional new data are reported for solutions of glycerol, CMC, PAA, and xanthan in bubble columns with diameters of 0.06, 0.14 and 0.30 m diameter. The wide variation of the flow behaviour index (1 to 0.18) allows to evaluate the effective shear rate due to the gas flow. New dimensionless correlations are developed based on the own and literature data, applied to predict k La in fermentation broths, and compared to other reactor types.List of Symbols a(a) m–1 specific interfacial area referred to reactor (liquid) volume - Bo Bond number (g D c 2 L/) - c L(c L * ) kmol m–3 (equilibrium) liquid phase oxygen concentration - C coefficient characterising the velocity profile in liquid slugs - C s m–1 coefficient in Eq. (2) - d B(dvs) m bubble diameter (Sauter mean of d B) - d 0 m diameter of the openings in the gas distributor plate - D c m column diameter - D L m2s–1 diffusivity - E L(EW) m2 s–1 dispersion coefficient (in water) - E 2 square relative error - Fr Froude number (u G/(g Dc)0.5) - g m s–2 gravity acceleration - Ga Gallilei number (g D c 3 L 2 / eff 2 ) - h m height above the gas distributor the gas holdup is characteristic for - k Pasn fluid consistency index (Eq. 1) - k L m s–1 liquid side mass transfer coefficient - k La(kLa) s–1 volumetric mass transfer coefficient referred to reactor (liquid) volume - L m dispersion height - n flow behaviour index (Eq. 1) - P W power input - Re liquid slug Reynolds number ( L(u G +u L) D c/eff) - Sc Schmidt number ( eff/( L D L )) - Sh Sherwood number (k La D c 2 /DL) - t s time - u B(usw) m s–1 bubble (swarm) rise velocity - u G(uL) m s–1 superficial gas (liquid) velocity - V(VL) m3 reactor (liquid) volume Greec Symbols W m–2 K–1 heat transfer coefficient - y(y eff) s–1 (effective) shear rate - G relative gas holdup - s relaxation time of viscoelastic liquid - L(eff) Pa s (effective) liquid viscosity (Eq. 1) - L kg m–3 liquid density - N/m surface tension  相似文献   

16.
A cost-minimizing mathematical model for on-line control of dissolved oxygen using agitation speed and aeration rate was developed. In pilot scale monensin fermentation using Streptomyces cinnamonensis, this algortihm provided stable control of dissolved oxygen at 40%, reducing energy usage 27.8%. The agitation and aeration profiles provided by the algorithm respresent the pathway of least energy cost for control at the desired dissolved oxygen level. Other observed advantages of bivariable control were reduction of foaming, evaporation, and gas holdup. Reduced maintenance of compressors and agitator motors could also be expected due to decreased load. Monensin productivity equivalent to fermentation with constant agitation and aeration was not obtained, however, with potency reduced 14.8% with the dissolved oxygen control strategy.List of Symbols A m2 cross sectional area of fermentor - A 1, A 2, A 3, A 4 constants of polynomial fit to Calderbank's equations - BP N/m2 gauge back pressure - C ag $/W/s cost of electrical power - C Q $/m3 cost of compressed air - CE mol/m3/s carbon dioxide evolution rate - D m impeller diameter - DO, DO meas, DO sp % dissolved oxyen saturation at any time, measured, and setpoint respectively - h m height of liquid in fermentor - H N/m2/mmol Henry's constant for oxygen in water - H av average gas holdup in fermentor - k L a, k L a meas, k L k sp s–1 oxygen mass transfer coefficient at any time, measured, and setpoint respectively - N, N sp s–1 agitation speed at any time and setpoint respectively - N a, N a, sp aeration number at any time and setpoint respectively - N i total number of impellers - N p impeller power number - N s number of impellers into which air is directly sparged - OU, OU meas mol/m3/s Oxygen uptake rate at any time and measured respectively - P W ungassed agitation power - P g, P g,meas, P g,sp W gassed agitation power at any time, measured, and set point respectively - Q, Q meas, Q sp m3/s aeration rate at any time, measured, and setpoint respectively - T K fermentation temperature - u g m/s linear gas velocity - V m3 fermentation liquid volume - mole fraction of oxygen in fermentation off-gas - calculation constant - motor efficiency - $/s sum of agitation and aeration costs - kg/m3 liquid density  相似文献   

17.
Summary A special temperature control system has been developed and applied to continuous measuring of the heat evolved during a fermentation process. In this system, the fermentation broth was overcooled by a given constant cooling water flow. The excess heat removed from the fermentor was then made up by an immersion electrical heater. The action of the temperature controller was precisely monitored as it varied in response to the amount of heat produced by the microbial activities.The technique was used for determining the heat evolution byEscherichia coli grown on glucose. The ratio between quantities of total heat release and total oxygen consumption has been determined to be 0.556 MJ/mol O2.The newly developed technique can be employed as an online sensor to monitor the microbial activities of either aerobic or anaerobic fermentation systems.Symbols Cc Heat capacity of cooling water (MJ/kg · °C) - Cp Heat capacity (MJ/kg · °C) - I Current of immersion heater (A) - K Constant in Equation (2) (h) - K Constant in Equation (13) (m3 · h · °C/MJ) - Qc Flow rate of cooling water (m3/h) - Heat of agitation (MJ/m3 · h) - Heat dissipated by the bubbling gas (MJ/m3 · h) - Heat removal by the action of controller (MJ/m3 · h) - Heat of fermentation (MJ/m3 · h) - Heat loss to the surroundings (MJ/m3 · h) - Qpass Constant average power dissipated by the immersion heater (MJ/m3 · h) - Fluctuating power dissipated by the immersion heater (MJ/m3 · h) - Power dissipated by the immersion heater (MJ/m3 · h) - T Temperature of fermentation broth (°C) - Constant average temperature of fermentation broth (°C) - Fluctuating temperature of fermentation broth (°C) - Ta Temperature of the ambient air (°C) - Tc Inlet temperature of cooling water (°C) - U1A1 Specific heat transfer coefficient for determination of heat loss to the surroundings (MJ/m3 · h · °C) - U2A2 Specific heat transfer coefficient for cooling surfaces (MJ/m3 · h · °C) - U3A3 Constant in Equation (16) (MJ/m3 · h · °C) - V Voltage of immersion heater (V) - VL Liquid volume (m3) - OUR Oxygen uptake rate (mol O2/m3 · h) Greek Letters Hfo The ratio between the total heat release and the total oxygen uptake (MJ/mol O2) - c Density of cooling water (kg/m3) - Time constant defined in Equation (6) (h) - iMiCpi Heat capacity of system components (fermentation broth + fermentor jar + stainless steel) (MJ/m3 · °C)  相似文献   

18.
The bioleaching of minerals is a complex process that is affected by a number of biological, mineralogical, electrochemical and engineering factors. This work presents and discusses the most significant process engineering aspects involved in the bacterial leaching of copper ores, i.e. bacterial population, type of mineral and particle size, nutrients and inhibitors, oxygen and carbon dioxide, temperature and pH, leaching kinetics and operation mode.It is concluded that more work is needed in this area in order to gain a deeper insight in the many factors that govern this process. This would allow to significantly improve its overall productivity.List of Symbols C L kg/m3 dissolved oxygen concentration - C * kg/m3 equilibrium oxygen concentration - d, e, f, g % percentage of C, H, O and N in the cell - D m impeller diameter - K consistency index - K S, K1, Kc constants - k La h–1 volumetric oxygen transfer coefficient - M b mol/kg biomass apparent molecular weight - N s–1 rotation frequency - n behavior index - P kg/m3 ungassed agitation power, product concentration - P g kW/m3 gassed agitation power - p % pulp density - Q m3/h air flow rate - S kg/m3 limiting substrate concentration - W kg/(m3 · h) mass transfer rate per unit volume - X cells/cm3 biomass concentration - Y o g cells/g Fe oxygen cell yield - Y x g cells/g Fe substrate cell yield - h–1 specific growth rate - m h–1 maximum specific growth rate  相似文献   

19.
Summary A simple method is proposed for calculating oxygen pentration depth in immobilized cells by assuming zero order kinetics in the presence of several external oxygen transport resistances. Calculations indicate that typical penetration depths of oxygen for immobilized microbial cells are in the range of 50–200 and those for immobilized or encapsulated animal and plant tissue culture are about 500–1000 . Based on calculations, oxygen transport in microencapsulation and microcarriers for tissue cultures are not transport-limited, but a slight limitation is expected for those in a hollow fiber reactor.Nomenclature as specific area of a support (cm) - Bi Biot number - dimensionless - Cb oxygen concentration in the bulk liquid (mM) - C b C b * -Ccr (mM) - C b * bulk oxygen concentration in equilibrium with air (mM) - Ccr critical oxygen concentration (mM) - Cs oxygen concentration in the solid phase (mM) - dp diameter or thickness of a support (cm) - Deff effective diffusivity of oxygen in the solid phase (cm2/s) - km membrane permeability of oxygen (cm/s) - k m * Deff/m - kLaL liquid phase mass transfer rate coefficient (1/s) - ksas solid phase mass transfer rate coefficient (1/s) - (OUR)v volumetric oxygen uptake rate (mmol O2/l) - p geometry parameter, p=0 for slab, p=1 for cylinder, p=2 for sphere - Pd oxygen penetration depth (cm) - P d oxygen penetration depth in the absence of external diffusion limitation (cm) - Q volumetric oxygen uptake rate, (mmol O2/l·h) - specific oxygen uptake rate (mmol O2gm biomass (dry)·h) - r length coordinate (cm) - rc oxygen penetration depth for sphere (cm) - r c rc in the absence of external diffusion limitation (cm) - r c * oxygen penetration depth for cylinder (cm) - r c * r c * in the absence of external diffusion limitation (cm) - rcom combined mass transfer rate resistance (s) - rd location where Cs becomes zero or Ccr (cm) - ri radius of cylinder or sphere, half thickness of slab (cm) - Usg superficial gas velocity (cm/s) - X cell concentration (g/l) Greek letters Thiele modulus, dimensionless - L, s liquid and solid phase volume fraction, respectively, dimensionless - effectiveness factor On sabbatical leave from KAIST, Seoul, Korea  相似文献   

20.
The production of lactose-based sweeteners is considered very promising. Fungal lactase has been immobilized on crosslinked chitin to develop a process for the continuous hydrolysis of demineralized whey permaete. The optimization of lactase immobilization on chitin and chitosan was performed, activities of 4 · 105 and 2.2 · 105 u/kg at yields of 33 and 23% were obtained for both supports, respectively. The chitin based catalyst was selected for further studies and a procedure was developed for in-situ enzyme immobilization. The kinetic behaviour of the catalyst was determined to propose a kinetic model for the initial rate of lactose hydrolysis. Pseudo steady-state and long term operation of packed bed reactors with chitin-immobilized lactase ranging from small laboratory to pre-pilot unit was carried out. The results are discussed and compared with commercial immobilized lactases. Preliminary economic evaluation for the production of ultrafiltered whey protein and hydrolyzed lactose syrup, within a dairy industry in Chile, was satisfactory in terms of profitability, both for the chitin immobilized lactase developed and for a commercial immobilized lactase.List of Symbols a moles/m3 glucose concentration in Eq. (1) - C i US$ total annual cost (without considering plant depreciation) - D US$ annual depreciation - F m3/h flowrate - h m3/h volumetric mass transfer coefficient - i moles/m3 galactose concentration in Eqs. (1) and (2) - K A moles/m3 dissociation constant for glucose in Eq. (1) - K A moles/m3 dissociation constant for glucose in Eq. (1) - K I moles/m3 inhibition constant for galactose in Eqs. (1) and (2) - K m moles/m3 Michaelis constant for substrate in Eqs. (1) and (2) - k D h–1 first-order thermal deactivation constant - P kg dry weight of catalyst - PV US$ net present value - R % discounted cash-flow rate of return - s moles/m3 substrate concentration - s0 moles/m3 feed substrate concentration - S n US$ annual sales income - TC US$ total capital income - t 1/2 h catalyst half-life - v moles/h · kg initial rate of reaction - V MAX moles/h · kg maximum reaction rate in Eqs. (1) and (2) - V MAX moles/h · kg maximum reaction rate in Eq. (1) - ¯V max moles/h initial rate of reaction - V R m3 reaction volume free of catalyst particles - X substrate degree of conversion = s0–s/s0 - Damkoehler number = ¯V MAX /h k m - moles/(m3 · h) reactor productivity in Eq. (3)  相似文献   

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