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1.
This paper deals with the influence of a new flow unsteadiness on the permeate flux in crossflow filtration of microbial suspension during fermentation. A pneumatically controlled valve generates intermittent jets from the main flow, leading to the formation of large vortices moving downstream along the tubular membrane. The unsteadiness does not affect the cell behaviour during fermentation and the resulting permeate flux is found twice higher than for usual filtration process.  相似文献   

2.
In crossflow filtration (CFF) of a culture broth of Penicillium multicolor, several types of membranes were tested with respect to permeate flux and the permeability of β-galactosidase, an extracellular enzyme. Membranes with surface pore sizes of 0.5 and 0.08 μm were selected because of the high flux and high β-galactosidase permeability. They were combined with a 3 × 10−2 m3 fermentor as a system of repeated batch culture with crossflow filtration. With this system, β-galactosidase was continuously produced for 6 d and its productivity was about 3 times higher than that in fed-batch culture.  相似文献   

3.
Factors affecting the performance of crossflow filtration were investigated with a thin-channel module and yeast cells. In crossflow filtration of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells cultivated with YPD medium (Yeast extract, polypeptone, and dextrose) and suspended in saline, a steady state was attained within several minutes when the cell concentration was low and the circulation flow rate was high. The steady-state flux and the change in flux during the initial unsteady state were explained well by conventional filtration theory, with the amount of cake deposited and the mean specific resistance to the cake measured in a dead-end filtration apparatus used in calculation. When the circulation flow rate was lower than a critical value, a part of the channel of the crossflow filtration module was plugged with cell cake, and thus the steady-state flux was low. In crossflow filtration of suspensions of commercially available baker's yeast, the flux gradually decreased, and the flux after 8 h of filtration was lower than the value calculated by filtration theory. Fine particles contaminating the baker's yeast was responsible for the decrease. A similar phenomenon was responsible for the decrease. A similar phenomenon was observed in crossflow filtration of a broth of S. cerevisiae cells cultivated in molasses medium, which also contains such particles, had no effect of the permeation flux during crossflow filtration. (c) 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
The periodical stopping of permeation flow was applied to increase the permeation flux in crossflow filtration of commercially available baker's yeast cell suspension. The permeation flux after 3 h filtration in the crossflow filtration increased to 8 x 10(-5) m(3) /m(2) s (290 L/m(2) h) from 2 x 10(-5) m(3)/m(2) s (72 L/m(2) h) by applying the periodical stopping of permeation. Introduction of air bubbles during the stopping period of permeation further increased the flux.(c) John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The specific resistance of the cake formed in the crossflow filtration of Escherichia coli was higher than that formed in the dead-end filtration. The scanning electronmicrographs revealed that the cells in the cake formed in the crossflow filtration were oriented in the direction of the circulation flow, while the cells deposited at random in the dead-end filtration. The shear-induced arrangement of cells might increase the specific resistance of the cake in crossflow filtration.  相似文献   

6.
This study deals with the use of an upward gas/liquid slug flow to reduce tubular mineral membrane fouling. The injection of air into the feedstream is designed to create hydrodynamic conditions that destabilize the cake layer over the membrane surface inside the filtration module complex. Experimental study was carried out by filtering a biological suspension (yeast) through different tubular mineral membranes. The effects of operating parameters, including the nature of the membrane, liquid and gas flowrates, and transmembrane pressure, were examined. When external fouling was the main limiting phenomenon, flux enhancements of a factor of three could be achieved with gas sparging compared with single liquid phase crossflow filtration. The economic benefits of this unsteady technique have also been examined. To investigate the possibility of long-term operation of the two-phase flow principle, dense cell perfusion cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were carried out in a fermentor coupled with an ultrafiltration module. The air injection allowed a high and stable flux to be maintained over 100 h of fermentation, with a final cell concentration of 150 g dry weight/L. At equal biomass level, a twofold gain in flux could be attained compared with classical steady crossflow filtration at half the cost.  相似文献   

7.
Recovery of 2,3‐butanediol from a fermentation broth entails the separation of cells and other suspended solids as the initial step for subsequent separation stages. The aim of this work was to study the cross‐flow filtration of broth in the fermentation of 2,3‐butanediol from blackstrap molasses by Klebsiella oxytoca (NRRL B‐199). A plate type laboratory scale cross‐flow microfiltration unit with a 0.2‐μm cellulose acetate membrane was employed for this purpose. Preliminary results showed that the permeate flux would decline rapidly due to fouling caused by the natural impurities of blackstrap molasses, and modifications of the conventional cross‐flow filtration would be essential to achieve a filtration rate appropriate for practical purposes. In this work, the permeate flux was enhanced by air sparging, which scoured the membrane surface of colloidal deposits and allowed a practical filtration rate to be maintained. The average permeate flux increased by 39 % and 54 % for an air sparging rate of 0.5 L/min and 1.0 L/min respectively, in the case of an initial biomass concentration of 4.66 g/L. For an initial biomass concentration of 14.2 g/L, the flux increased by 105 % and 146 % for the gas rate of 0.5 and 1.0 L/min, respectively. It may be concluded that gas sparging is beneficial in cross‐flow filtration of thick suspensions like a fermentation broth.  相似文献   

8.
A promising method for reducing membrane fouling during crossflow microfiltration of biological suspensions is backpulsing. Very short backpulses (0.1-1.0 s) have been used to increase the net flux for washed bacterial suspensions and whole bacterial fermentation broths. The net fluxes under optimum backpulsing conditions for the washed bacteria are approximately 10-fold higher than those obtained during normal crossflow microfiltration operation, whereas only a 2-fold improvement in the net flux is achieved for the fermentation broths. A theory is presented that is based on external fouling during forward filtration and nonuniform cleaning of the membrane during reverse filtration. The model contains an adjustable parameter which is a measure of the cleaning efficiency during backpulsing; the cleaning efficiency found by fitting the model to the experiments increases with increasing frequency and duration of the backpulses. The theory predicts an optimum backpulsing frequency, as was observed experimentally. An economic analysis shows that crossflow microfiltration with backpulsing has lower costs than centrifugation, rotary vacuum filtration, and crossflow microfiltration without backpulsing.  相似文献   

9.
In this paper the effectiveness of separation in different systems of dynamic filtration, both mechanical and crossflow filtration, has been compared. Apart from the filtration rate obtained under comparable conditions the energy demand for these processes has also been compared. The obtained results show that dynamic mechanical filtration can in some cases be more effective than the more commonly used crossflow filtration.  相似文献   

10.
The development of a downstream process for the isolation of bovine lactoferrin (bLF) from sweet whey is presented. Whey is a by‐product from the cheese manufacturing process that is often used to produce whey protein concentrate powders for food applications. Besides the major whey proteins such as lactalbumin or BSA, minor whey proteins are present such as lactoperoxidase and bLF. In addition to the well‐known biological functions as an antimicrobial and antiviral agent, bLF shows immunomodulatory functions in the host defence system. For the isolation of bLF, a two‐step downstream process was developed based on membrane systems. This paper discusses the application of several membrane types for a crossflow filtration of sweet whey to remove insoluble particles and lipids from the whey with the aim of obtaining a permeate which can be directly used for downstreaming the minor component via ion exchange membrane adsorber systems. The application of such a membrane adsorber is demonstrated.  相似文献   

11.
Giardia and Cryptosporidium are important agents of water-borne parasitic diseases. In this work we have examined the recovery efficiency of two methods for concentrating Giardia cysts and Cryptosporidium oocysts from water: a membrane filtration method and a crossflow filtration method. Results demonstrated a higher recovery efficiency for crossflow filtration method in comparison to the membrane filtration method. In addition, Giardia cysts and Cryptosporidium oocysts concentration was evaluated in wastewater samples submitted to chemical flocculation or chemical flocculation followed by slow sand filtration. Results showed that slow sand filtration was capable of reducing the number of Giardia cysts, but not of Cryptosporidium oocysts in wastewater.  相似文献   

12.
A forced-flow membrane reactor system for transfructosylation was investigated using several ceramic membranes having different pore sizes. beta-Fructofuranosidase from Aspergillus niger ATCC 20611 was immobilized chemically to the inner surface of a ceramic membrane activated by a silane-coupling reagent. Sucrose solution was forced through the ceramic membrane by crossflow filtration while transfructosylation took place. The saccharide composition of the product, which was a mixture of fructooligosaccharides (FOS), was a function of the permeate flux, which was easily controlled by pressure. Using 0.2 micrometer pore size of symmetric ceramic membrane, the volumetric productivity obtained was 3.87 kg m(-3) s(-1), which was 560 times higher than that in a reported batch system, with a short residence time of 11 s. The half-life of the immobilized enzyme in the membrane was estimated to be 35 days by a long-term operation.  相似文献   

13.
Recovery of an aqueous bioconversion product from complex, two-phase Pseudomonas putida broths containing 20% (v/v) soybean oil presents a significant challenge for downstream processing. Although not used before in multiple-phase separation for complex biotech products, crossflow filtration employing ceramic filters is one of the most attractive options which allow the design of integrated, continuous bioconversion processes. As a first attempt, we studied multichannel, monolithic ceramic membranes of different nominal pore sizes and lumen diameters under steady-state conditions. The best performance was obtained with 0.2-microm-pore/3-mm-lumen membrane, which completely rejected both cells and oil droplets from the permeate, creating a clear aqueous product stream. Although the same separation was achieved, the 50K molecular weight cut-off (MWCO) ultrafilter showed greater irreversible but similar reversible resistance, in addition to an order-of-magnitude higher membrane resistance. Larger nominal pore microfilters, such as 0.45 and 1.0 microm, experienced both cell and oil leakage even at low transmembrane pressure (10 psig). Attributed to greater shear at the same recirculation rate, smaller lumen filters did provide greater permeate flux. However, for practical purposes, the 0. 2-microm-pore/4-mm-lumen ceramic membrane was chosen for further evaluation. Transmembrane pressures up to 50 psig provided only marginal gains in filtration performance, whereas increasing shear rate resulted in linear increases in steady-state flux, presumably due to formation of shear-sensitive, complex gel/oil/cell layer near the membrane surface. A nominal shear rate of 9200 s-1 and 20 psig transmembrane pressure were chosen as optimal operating conditions. Additional studies in a clean system revealed that as low as 5% (v/v) soybean oil in deionized (DI) water resulted in an order-of-magnitude decline in steady-state permeate flux. Breakthrough of oil droplets occurred at 35 psig transmembrane pressure. The severe fouling and breakthrough phenomena disappeared in the presence of washed cells for transmembrane pressure up to 43 psig, implying an oil/cell layer coating the membrane surface, thus preventing oil penetration. Serious membrane fouling was also experienced in microfiltration of oil-free, cell-free supernatant and oil-free whole broth. Consequently, soluble proteins/surfactants were suspected to be the major membrane foulants. Interestingly, soybean oil up to 30% (v/v) enhanced the flux, presumably through complicated interactions with the major foulants. Regeneration of membrane was best achieved with protease and hot caustic/bleach treatments, supporting the hypothesized fouling mechanisms mentioned above. This work provides process and system information for batch microfiltration runs in the future, to be reported elsewhere as Part II of this work.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of Trans-Membrane Pressure (TMP) on permeate flux during cross-flow microfiltration of bacterial cell suspensions in tubular ceramic membranes is studied experimentally. Continuous filtration experiments with suspensions of whole bacterial cells (Mycobacterium M156) show a dramatic permeate flux decline with increasing TMP. During the very early stages of the filtration process, a linear relationship between permeate flux and TMP is observed, suggesting an initial surface sorption of cells on the membrane surface. At longer times, the permeate flux vs. TMP data exhibit a critical pressure beyond which the permeate flux declines with increasing trans-membrane pressure. This is interpreted in terms of the formation of a compressible cake, whose permeability can be described through the Carman-Kozeny equation.  相似文献   

15.
We study crossflow filtration mechanisms in suspension-feeding fishes using computational fluid dynamics to model fluid flow and food particle movement in the vicinity of the gill rakers. During industrial and biological crossflow filtration, particles are retained when they remain suspended in the mainstream flow traveling across the filter surface rather than traveling perpendicularly to the filter. Here we identify physical parameters and hydrodynamic processes that determine food particle movement and retention inside the fish oral cavity. We demonstrate how five variables affect flow patterns and particle trajectories: (1) flow speed inside the fish oral cavity, (2) incident angle of the flow approaching the filter, (3) dimensions of filter structures, (4) particle size, and (5) particle density. Our study indicates that empirical experiments are needed to quantify flow parameters inside the oral cavity, and morphological research is needed to quantify dimensions of the filter apparatus such as gill rakers, the gaps between rakers, and downstream barriers. Ecological studies on suspension-feeding fishes are also needed to quantify food particle size and density, as these variables can affect particle retention due to hydrodynamic processes during crossflow filtration.  相似文献   

16.
Crossflow filtration of yeast broth cultivated in molasses   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
A broth of yeast cells cultivated in molasses was crossfiltered with a thin-channel module. The permeation flux gradually decreased at a constant cell concentration. The flux was much lower than that obtained for yeast broth cultivated in yeast extract, polypeptone, and dextrose (YPD) medium during the filtration. The flux did not depend on the membrane pore size (0.45 to 5 mum). The steady-state flux was one-twentieth that calculated for a cake filtration mode from the amount of cake per unit filtration area and the specific resistance of the cake measured in a dead-end filtration apparatus. The lower flux was due to small particles (most of which were less than 1 mum in diameter) in the molasses. The mehanism of crossflow filtration of broths of yeast cells cultivated in molasses was clarified by analysis of the change in flux with time and observations with scanning electron microscopy. At the initial stage of crossflow filtration the yeast cells and particles from the molasses were deposited on the membrane to form the molasses were deposited on the membrane to form a cake in a similar way to dead-end filtration. After the deposition of cells onto the membrane ceased, the fine particles from molasses formed a thin layer, which had higher resistance than the cake formed next to the membrane. The backwashing method was effective to increase the flux. The flux increased low when the pore size was 0.45 to 0.08 mum, but using larger pores of 3 to 5 mum it returned almost to the bases line. (c) 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
The suspension-feeding cichlids Oreochromis aureus (blue tilapia) and Oreochromis esculentus (ngege tilapia) are able to selectively retain small food particles. The gill rakers and microbranchiospines of these species have been assumed to function as filters. However, surgical removal of these oral structures, which also removed associated mucus, did not significantly affect the total number of 11–200 μm particles ingested by the fish. This result supports the hypothesis that the branchial arch surfaces themselves play an important role in crossflow filtration. Both species selectively retained microspheres greater than 50 μm with gill rakers and microbranchiospines intact as well as removed, demonstrating that neither these structures nor mucus are necessary for size selectivity to occur during biological crossflow filtration. After removal of the gill rakers and microbranchiospines, O. esculentus retained significantly more microspheres 51–70 μm in diameter and fewer 91–130 μm microspheres compared to retention with intact structures, but the particle size selectivity of O. aureus was not affected significantly. These results support conclusions from previous computational fluid dynamics simulations indicating that particle size can have marked effects on particle trajectory and retention inside the fish oropharyngeal cavity during crossflow filtration. The substantial inter-individual variability in particle retention by suspension-feeding fish is an unexplored area of research with the potential to increase our understanding of the factors influencing particle retention during biological filtration.  相似文献   

18.
Nitrate is an undesirable component of several foods. A typical case of contamination with high nitrate contents is whey concentrate, containing nitrate in concentrations up to 25 l. The microbiological removal of nitrate by Paracoccus denitrificans under formation of harmless nitrogen in combination with a cell retention reactor is described here. Focus lies on the resource‐conserving design of a microbal denitrification process. Two methods are compared. The application of polyvinyl alcohol‐immobilized cells, which can be applied several times in whey feed, is compared with the implementation of a two step denitrification system. First, the whey concentrate's nitrate is removed by ion exchange and subsequently the eluent regenerated by microorganisms under their retention by crossflow filtration. Nitrite and nitrate concentrations were determined by reflectometric color measurement with a commercially available Reflectoquant® device. Correction factors for these media had to be determined. During the pilot development, bioreactors from 4 to 250 mg·L?1 and crossflow units with membrane areas from 0.02 to 0.80 m2 were examined. Based on the results of the pilot plants, a scaling for the exemplary process of denitrifying 1,000 tons per day is discussed. © 2010 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog. 2010  相似文献   

19.
The effect of permeate flux on the development of a biofouling layer on cross-flow separation membranes was studied by using a bench-scale system consisting of two replicate 100-molecular-weight-cutoff tubular ultrafiltration membrane modules, one that allowed flow of permeate and one that did not (control). The system was inoculated with Pseudomonas putida S-12 tagged with a red fluorescent protein and was operated using a laminar flow regimen under sterile conditions with a constant feed of diluted (1:75) Luria-Bertani medium. Biofilm development was studied by using field emission scanning electron microscopy and confocal scanning laser microscopy and was subsequently quantified by image analysis, as well as by determining live counts and by permeate flux monitoring. Biofilm development was highly enhanced in the presence of permeate flow, which resulted in the buildup of complex three-dimensional structures on the membrane. Bacterial transport toward the membrane by permeate drag was found to be a mechanism by which cross-flow filtration contributes to the buildup of a biofouling layer that was more dominant than transport of nutrients. Cellular viability was found to be not essential for transport and adhesion under cross-flow conditions, since the permeate drag overcame the effect of bacterial motility.  相似文献   

20.
Protein recovery from a bacterial lysate was accomplished using microfiltration membranes in a flat crossflow filter and in a cylindrical rotary filter. Severe membrane fouling yielded relatively low long-term permeate flux values of 10(-4)-10(-3) cm/s (where I cm/s = 3.6 x 10(4) L/m(2) - h). The permeate flux was found to be nearly independent of transmembrane pressure and to increase with increasing shear rate and decreasing solids concentration. The flux increased with shear to approximately the one-third power or greater for the flat filter and the one-half power or greater for the rotary filter; the stronger dependence for the rotary filter is thought to result from Taylor vortices enhancing the back transport of debris carried to the membrane surface by the permeate flow. The average protein transmission or sieving coefficient was measured at approximately 0.6, but considerable scatter in the transmission data was observed. The largest sieving coefficients were obtained for dilute suspensions at high shear rate. The rotary filter provided higher fluxes than did the flat filter for dilute suspensions, but not for concentrated suspensions. (c) 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

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