Production of ethanol by immobilized Saccharomyces bayanus in an extractive fermentation system
- 20 June 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Biotechnology & Bioengineering
- Vol. 29 (9) , 1097-1104
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bit.260290909
Abstract
An extractive fermentation system using immobilized yeast cells was developed to study the ethanol production at high sugar concentrations. Organic acids were used as extracting solvents of ethanol and their toxicity was tested in free and k-carrageenan entrapped cell preparations. Immobilization seems to protect cells against solvent toxicity, when long-chain organic acids, e.g., oleic acid, were used, probably due to steric and diffusional limitations, the free cells not being viable at high oleic acid concentrations. The entrapped cells also present a higher metabolic activity than their free counterparts at high glucose concentrations. A solution of 300 g/L of glucose was totally fermented by the immobilized yeast cells, which when free cannot normally convert more than 200 g/L. In situ recovery of ethanol by oleic acid in a batch immobilized cell system led to higher ethanol productivities and to the fermentation of 400 g/L, when an oleic acid/medium ratio of 5 was used.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
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