4.6 Article

Online monitoring of gas transfer rates during CO and CO/H2 gas fermentation in quasi-continuously ventilated shake flasks

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 118, Issue 5, Pages 2092-2104

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.27722

Keywords

Clostridium ljungdahlii; gas fermentation; gas transfer rate; small-scale online monitoring; syngas fermentation

Funding

  1. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung [03INT513BE]

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Syngas fermentation technology shows great potential for emission reduction in the future, but further research is needed on key parameters such as substrate toxicity and gas transfer rates. The newly developed online monitoring device can facilitate rapid process development by measuring crucial parameters in real time.
Syngas fermentation is a potential player for future emission reduction. The first demonstration and commercial plants have been successfully established. However, due to its novelty, development of syngas fermentation processes is still in its infancy, and the need to systematically unravel and understand further phenomena, such as substrate toxicity as well as gas transfer and uptake rates, still persists. This study describes a new online monitoring device based on the respiration activity monitoring system for cultivation of syngas fermenting microorganisms with gaseous substrates. The new device is designed to online monitor the carbon dioxide transfer rate (CO2TR) and the gross gas transfer rate during cultivation. Online measured data are used for the calculation of the carbon monoxide transfer rate (COTR) and hydrogen transfer rate (H2TR). In cultivation on pure CO and CO + H-2, CO was continuously limiting, whereas hydrogen, when present, was sufficiently available. The maximum COTR measured was approximately 5 mmol/L/h for pure CO cultivation, and approximately 6 mmol/L/h for cultivation with additional H-2 in the gas supply. Additionally, calculation of the ratio of evolved carbon dioxide to consumed monoxide, similar to the respiratory quotient for aerobic fermentation, allows the prediction of whether acetate or ethanol is predominantly produced. Clostridium ljungdahlii, a model acetogen for syngas fermentation, was cultivated using only CO, and CO in combination with H-2. Online monitoring of the mentioned parameters revealed a metabolic shift in fermentation with sole CO, depending on COTR. The device presented herein allows fast process development, because crucial parameters for scale-up can be measured online in small-scale gas fermentation.

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