4.6 Article

A scalable bubble-free membrane aerator for biosurfactant production

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 118, Issue 9, Pages 3545-3558

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.27822

Keywords

foam‐ free; membrane aeration; metabolic engineering; Pseudomonas putida; rhamnolipid

Funding

  1. Ministry of Innovation, Science, and Research within the NRW Strategieprojekt BioSC [313/323-400-00213]
  2. RWTH Aachen University [thes0610]

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The bioeconomy plays a crucial role in mitigating greenhouse gas emissions and climate change, but faces limitations in industrialization due to economic and technical obstacles. This study presents a synergistic combination of simulations and experiments to design an efficient bubble-free aeration bioreactor.
The bioeconomy is a paramount pillar in the mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions and climate change. Still, the industrialization of bioprocesses is limited by economical and technical obstacles. The synthesis of biosurfactants as advanced substitutes for crude-oil-based surfactants is often restrained by excessive foaming. We present the synergistic combination of simulations and experiments towards a reactor design of a submerged membrane module for the efficient bubble-free aeration of bioreactors. A digital twin of the combined bioreactor and membrane aeration module was created and the membrane arrangement was optimized in computational fluid dynamics studies with respect to fluid mixing. The optimized design was prototyped and tested in whole-cell biocatalysis to produce rhamnolipid biosurfactants from sugars. Without any foam formation, the new design enables a considerable higher space-time yield compared to previous studies with membrane modules. The design approach of this study is of generic nature beyond rhamnolipid production.

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