Lactic acid production through cell-recycle repeated-batch bioreactor.

Hurok Oh, Young-Jung Wee, Jong-Sun Yun, Hwa-Won Ryu
Author Information
  1. Hurok Oh: Faculty of Applied Chemical Engineering, Institute of Bioindustrial Technology, Chonnam National University, Gwangju 500-757, Korea.

Abstract

The effect of various nitrogen sources on cell growth and lactic acid production was investigated. The most effective nitrogen source was yeast extract; more yeast extract gave higher cell growth and lactic acid productivity. Yeast extract dosage and cell growth were proportional up to a yeast extract concentration of 30 g/L, and lactic acid productivity was linearly correlated up to a yeast extract dosage of 25 g/L. However, increasing the yeast extract content raises the total production cost of lactic acid. Therefore, we attempted to find the optimum yeast extract dosage for a repeated-batch operation with cell recycling. The results show that when using Enterococcus faecalis RKY1 only 26% of the yeast extract dosage for a conventional batch fermentation was sufficient to produce the same amount of lactic acid, whereas the lactic acid concentration in the product stream (92-94 g/L) and lactic acid productivity (6.03-6.20 g/[L x h]) were similar to those of a batch operation. Furthermore, long-term stability was established.

MeSH Term

Bioreactors
Biotechnology
Cell Division
Conservation of Natural Resources
Equipment Design
Fermentation
Glucose
Lactic Acid
Yeasts

Chemicals

Lactic Acid
Glucose

Word Cloud

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