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Recovery and Purification of Bio-Products

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Ball Mill: solid. Frozen cell paste, cells attached to or within a solid matrix. Large scale ... To pump a slurry (up to 1500 bar) through a restricted orifice valve. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Recovery and Purification of Bio-Products


1
Recovery and Purification of Bio-Products
  • Strategies to recovery and purify bio-products

Fermenter
Solid-liquid separation
Cells
Cell products
Supernatant
Recovery
Cell disruption or rupture
Purification
Cell debris
Crystallization and drying
2
Cell Disruption
  • Disruption the cell envelope is physically
    broken, releasing all intracellular components
    into the surrounding medium
  • Methods Mechanical and non mechanical
  • Mechanical
  • - Ultrasonication (sonicators)
  • bacteria, virus and spores
  • suspensions at lab-scale
  • Electronic generator?ultrasonic waves
  • ?mechanical oscillation
  • by a titanium probe immersed
  • in a cell disruption.

3
Cell Disruption
  • Mechanical
  • Milling continuous operation,
  • Algae, bacteria and fungi
  • Large scale, up to 2000kg/h
  • liquid and solid
  • Principle of operation
  • A grinding chamber filled with about 80 beads.
  • A shaft with designed discs or impellers is
    within the chamber.
  • The shift rotates at high speeds, high shearing
    and impact forces from the beads break the cell
    wall.

4
Cell Disruption
  • Mechanical
  • Ball Mill solid
  • Frozen cell paste, cells attached to or within a
    solid matrix.
  • Large scale

5
Cell Disruption
  • Mechanical
  • Homogenization suspension, large scale
  • To pump a slurry (up to 1500 bar) through a
    restricted orifice valve.
  • The cells disrupt as they are extruded through
    the valve to atmosphere pressure by
  • - high liquid shear in the orifice
  • - sudden pressure drop upon discharge
  • i.e. French press Gaulin-Manton lab scale
  • Rannie high-pressure
  • Homogenizer (large scale)

High pressure
orifice
6
Cell Disruption
  • Nonmechanical
  • - Chemicals use chemicals to solubilise the
    components in the cell walls to release the
    product.
  • Chemical requirements
  • - products are insensitive to the used
    chemicals.
  • - the chemicals must be easily separable.
  • Types of chemicals
  • - surfactants (solubilising lipids) sodium
    sulfonate, sodium dodecylsulfate.
  • - Alkali sodium hydroxide, harsh
  • - Organic solvents penetrating the lipids and
    swelling the cells. e.g. toluene.
  • e.g. Bacteria were treated with acetone followed
    by sodium dodecyl sulfate extraction of cellular
    proteins.

7
Cell Disruption
  • Nonmechanical
  • - Enzymes to lyse cell walls to release the
    product.
  • gentle, but high cost
  • i.e. lysozyme (carbohydrase) to lyse the cell
    walls of bacteria.
  • - Osmotic shock
  • Osmosis is the transport of water molecules from
    high- to a low-concentration region when these
    two phases are separated by a selective membrane.
  • Water is easier to pass the membrane than other
    components.
  • When cells are dumped into pure water, cells can
    swell and burst due to the osmotic flow of water
    into the cells.

8
Cell Disruption
  • Challenge Damage to the product
  • Heat denaturation
  • Oxidation of the product
  • Unhindered release of all intracellular products

9
Recovery and Purification of Bio-Products
  • Strategies to recovery and purify bio-products

Fermenter
Solid-liquid separation
Cells
Cell products
Supernatant
Recovery
Cell disruption or rupture
Purification
Cell debris
Crystallization and drying
10
Separation of Soluble Products
  • Liquid-liquid extraction
  • Difference of solubility in two immiscible liquid
  • Applicable separate inhibitory fermentation
    products such as ethanol and acetone-butanol from
    fermentation broth.
  • antibiotics (i.e. solvent amylacetate)
  • Requirements of liquid extractants
  • nontoxic, selective, inexpensive, immiscible
    with fermentation broth and
  • high distribution coefficient KDYL/XH
  • YL and XH are concentrations of the solute in
    light and heavy phases, respectively.
  • The light phase is the organic solvent and the
    heavy phase is the fermentation broth. e.x.
    Penicillin is extracted from a fermentation broth
    using isoamylacetate. KD could reach 50.

Light, YL
Heavy, XH
11
Separation of Soluble Products
  • Liquid-liquid extraction
  • When fermentation broth contains more than one
    component, then the selectivity coefficient (ß)
    is important.
  • ßil KD,,i/KD,j
  • KD,,I and KD,j are distribution coefficients of
    component i and j.
  • The higher the value of ßil is, the easier the
    separation of i from j.
  • pH effect
  • e.g. at low pH lt4, Penicillin can be
  • separated from other impurities such as
  • acetic acid from the fermentation broth to
  • organic phase amylacetate.

12
Separation of Soluble Products
Precipitation Reduce the product solubility in
the fermentation broth by adding
chemicals. Applicable separate proteins or
antibiotics from fermentation broth.
13
Separation of Soluble Products
  • Precipitation
  • Methods
  • - salting-out by adding inorganic salts such as
    ammonium sulfate, or sodium sulfate to increase
    high ionic strength (factors pH, temperature)
  • e.g. The solubility of hemoglobin is reduced
    with increased amount of ammonium sulfate.
  • - added salts interact more stronger with water
    so that the proteins precipitate.
  • - inexpensive
  • - Isoelectric (IE) precipitation
  • Precipitate a protein at its isoelectric point.
    E.g. The IE of cytochrome cM (without histidine
    tag) is 5.6 (Cho, et.al., 2000, Eur. J. Biochem.
    267, 10681074).

14
Separation of Soluble Products
  • Adsorption
  • Adsorb soluble product from fermentation broth
    onto solids.
  • Approaches physical adsorption (activated
    carbon), ion exchange (carboxylic acid cation
    exchange resin for recovering streptomycin)
  • Adsorption capacity mass of solute adsorbed per
    unit mass of adsorbent
  • Affected by properties of adsorbents
  • functional groups and their numbers, surface
    properties
  • by properties of solution solutes, pH,
    ionic strength and temperature
  • Difference of Affinity of product in the solid
    and liquid phase.
  • Applicable soluble products from dilute
    fermentation

15
Separation of Soluble Products
CHALLENGE!
SCREENING ADSORBENTS THE MOST PROMISING
TYPES - high capacity - reusable
16
Saturated uptake
Adsorbent 1
Adsorbent 2
Cs1
affinity
Cs2
C1
Adsorption Isotherms
17
Separation of Soluble Products
Langmuir isotherm CsCsM CL/(KCL) CsM is
the maximum concentration of solute adsorbed on
the solid phase. K is a constant. Cs and CL are
equilibrium concentration of solute in solid and
liquid phases, respectively.
  • Freundlich isotherm
  • Cs KF CL 1/n
  • KF and n are empirical constants.

18
Separation of Soluble Products
  • Membrane separation
  • Microfiltration 0.1 - 10 µm, bacterial and yeast
    cells.
  • Ultrafiltration macromolecules (2000 ltMWlt
    500,000)
  • Dialysis removal of low-MW solutes organic
    acids (100ltMWlt500) and inorganic ions
    (10ltMWlt100).
  • Reverse osmosis a pressure is applied onto a
    salt-containing phase, which drives water from a
    low to a high concentration region. MW lt 300.
  • The common features of the above methods
  • Use membrane
  • Driving forces pressure

19
Separation of Soluble Products
Chromatography To separate the solutes based on
the different rate of movement of the solutes in
the column with adsorbent materials. Principles
Chromatographic processes involve a stationary
phase and a mobile phase. Stationary phase can
be adsorbent, ion-exchange resin, porous solid,
or gel usually packed in a cylindrical
column. Mobil phase is the solution containing
solutes to be separated and the eluant that
carriers the solution through the stationary
phase. Applicable for protein, organics
separation.
20
Separation of Soluble Products
Chromatography Method A solution containing
several solutes is injected at one end of the
column followed by the eluant carrying the
solution through the column. Each solutes in the
original solution moves at a rate proportional to
its relative affinity for the stationary phase
and comes out at the end of the column as a
separated band.
(M. Shuler, Bioprocess. Eng. 2005)
21
Separation of Soluble Products
Chromatography
  • Mechanism
  • Similar to adsorption interaction of
    solute-adsorbent
  • Different to adsorption
  • - Chromatography is based on different rate of
    movement of the solute in the column
  • - Adsorption is based on the separation of one
    solute from other constituents by being captured
    on the adsorbent.

22
Separation of Soluble Products
Electrophoresis To separate charged solutes
based on their specific migration rates in an
electrical field. Positive charged solutes are
attracted to anode and negative charged solutes
to cathode. Factors electric field strength,
electric charge of the solutes, viscosity of
liquid and the particles size. Applicable for
protein separation.
23
Proteins Electrophoresis
http//fig.cox.miami.edu/cmallery/150/protein/SDS
.electrophoresis.jpg
24
Recovery and Purification of Bio-Products
  • Strategies to recovery and purify bio-products

Fermenter
Solid-liquid separation
Cells
Cell products
Supernatant
Recovery
Cell disruption or rupture
Purification
Cell debris
Crystallization and drying
25
Recovery and Purification of Bio-Products
  • Crystallization last step in producing highly
    purified products such as antibiotics.
  • Supersaturated solution, low temperature,
  • Crystals are separated by filters.
  • Drying
  • To remove solvent from purified wet product such
    as crystal or dissolved solute.
  • Vaccum-tray dryers pharmaceutical products
  • Freezing drying by sublimation (from solid ice
    to vapor), antibiotics, enzyme, bacteria
  • Spray dryer heat-sensitive materials

26
Summary of separation and purification
  • Liquid-Solid Separation
  • - Filtration rotary vaccum drum filter, micro-
    and ultra- filtration
  • - Centrifugation
  • Cell disruption
  • - Mechanical ultrasonication, milling,
    homogenization
  • - Nonmechanical chemicals, enzyme and osmotic
    shock

27
Summary of separation and purification
  • Separation of soluble products
  • - Liquid-liquid extraction
  • - Precipitation
  • - Adsorption
  • - Membrane separation ultrafiltration,
    dialysis, reverse osmosis
  • - Chromatography
  • - Electrophoresis
  • Crystallization and drying
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