Selection of microorganism immobilization particle for dark fermentative biohydrogen production by repeated batch operation

2016 ◽  
Vol 87 ◽  
pp. 697-702 ◽  
Author(s):  
Betül Kirli ◽  
Ilgi Karapinar Kapdan
2008 ◽  
Vol 59 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Camelia Ungureanu ◽  
Mihai Caramihai ◽  
Ana Aurelia Chirvase ◽  
Ovidiu Muntean ◽  
Iosif Nagy ◽  
...  

The technological solutions were elaborated to achieve the design of the production flow with respect of the Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) guidelines. To be in line with the GMP rules a fed-batch operation mode is be designed based on the batch modelling results. As the production rate of the microbial immunomodulator is associated with the biomass growth rate, it was required to study the bacterium growth kinetics in batch process. After the selection of the kinetic model based on several batches experimental data by using the analysis criteria - modelling error and estimation rule convergence, the limiting substrate concentration to be maintained during fed-batch cells exponential growth was determined as 115 - 125 mg/L. The batch bioprocess was performed in a Bioengineering AG bioreactor with a software based control of the main variables.


2011 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 323-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ji-Hyeon Yeon ◽  
Sang-Eun Lee ◽  
Woon Yong Choi ◽  
Do Hyung Kang ◽  
Hyoen-Yong Lee ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Wenfa Ng

Hydrogen is useful as a fuel and could be produced by a variety of means. One approach uses artificial photosynthesis where energy from sunlight powers the splitting of water into hydrogen and oxygen. But, biological methods for producing hydrogen has emerged strongly over the past decades. In particular, specific microorganisms could use different substrates to produce hydrogen at differing yields. Such fundamental discoveries with industrial applications thus motivated the use of metabolic engineering approaches and methodologies in enhancing biological hydrogen production through a series of enzyme over-expression, pathway debottlenecking, and gene deletion. However, such approaches heavily rely on the selection of an appropriate microbial chassis for biohydrogen production. With the proper strain in hand, use of alternative substrates may engender greater hydrogen productivities. But learning from the bioprocessing field, co-culture of two compatible microorganisms have been sought after for improving biohydrogen production. In addition, thermophilic microbes may also be useful candidates for exploiting hydrogen production from composting. Future outlook in the field looks into filling our gaps in understanding of the metabolic network that feeds into hydrogen production in different organisms. But, more importantly, problems such as reduced growth rate in engineered microbes point to fundamental issues with using genetically engineered microorganisms for improved biohydrogen production, to which clever bioprocess engineering may yield solutions.


2010 ◽  
Vol 105-106 ◽  
pp. 713-719
Author(s):  
Ming Qi Chen ◽  
Tao Ma ◽  
Nan Qi Ren

Substrates have critical effect on efficiency and cost of hydrogen production technology. Tradition evaluation index system which based on hydrogen production rate and conversion rate has limitation in comparing the economic value of different substrates utilized in hydrogen production system. This paper studies emergy of a fermentative biohydrogen production technology, comparing different biomass: wastewater and sewage sludge, the municipal solid waste and lignocellulosic biomass when they are used as substrates. Net emergy yield ratio, environmental loading ration and emergy-based sustainability index are measured. According to these indices, it shows an important role in reducing hydrogen production cost by developing cheap substrates. The results shows, the values of three indices were best when municipal wastewater was used as a substrate, it can reduce hydrogen production cost dramatically, obtain hydrogen and purify water simultaneously, benefit the environment protection.


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