학술논문

Application of porous teflon tubing method to automatic fed-batch culture of microorganisms. Ii. Automatic constant-value control of fed substrate (ethanol) concentration in semibatch culture of yeast
Document Type
Conference
Author
Source
Biotechnol. Bioeng.; (United States); 23:11; Conference: International Fermentation Symposium. 6, Univ. of Western Ontario, London, Canada, 25 Jul 1980
Subject
59 BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES YEASTS
CULTIVATION TECHNIQUES
ETHANOL
GROWTH
MASS BALANCE
MICROORGANISMS
REACTION KINETICS
SEMIBATCH CULTURE
SUBSTRATES
ALCOHOLS
FUNGI
HYDROXY COMPOUNDS
KINETICS
ORGANIC COMPOUNDS
PLANTS 550700* -- Microbiology
Language
English
Abstract
An automatic feedback control system incorporating a porous Teflon tubing sensor was developed and a strain of yeast was cultivated semibatchwise in mineral salt medium by feeding pure ethanol as the sole carbon source. In the control system, the ethanol concentration was continuously measured by the porous Teflon tubing sensor combined with a flame ionization detector, and its output signals were furnished to an automatic feed controller which controlled an ethanol feed pump so that deviations from the set level of ethanol concentration might be corrected. The controller was constructed on the basis of proportional-differential negative feedback control of which the proportional sensitivity and differentiation constants were estimated from the dynamic mass balance of ethanol. Precise measurement of temperature and compensation of the detector output signals for temperature fluctuations of culture broth were necessary to achieve good control. Cultivation experiments were carried out with three levels of concentrations: 10 to the power of 2, 10 to the power of 3, and 10 to the power of 4 ppm. The relative deviations of the concentrations were less than plus or minus 0.5% for the 10 to the power of 3 and 10 to the power of 4 ppm levels but a little offset arose for the 10 to the power of 2 ppm level. The growth of cells was at first exponetial and then almost linear when the dissolved oxygen concentration dropped considerably. (Refs. 14).