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Biomass restrictions

Continuous Stirred Tanks with Biomass Recycle. When the desired product is excreted, closing the system with respect to biomass offers a substantial reduction in the cost of nutrients. The idea is to force the cells into a sustained stationary or maintenance period where there is relatively little substrate used to grow biomass and where production of the desired product is maximized. One approach is to withhold some key nutrient so that cell growth is restricted, but to supply a carbon source and other components needed for the desired product. It is sometimes possible to maintain this state for weeks or months and to achieve high-volumetric productivities. There will be spontaneous cell loss (i.e., kd > 0), and true steady-state operation requires continuous purging and makeup. The purge can be achieved by incomplete separation and recycle... [Pg.457]

Figure 1. Time-course of pectin lyase activity in cultures of F. oxysporum f. sp. radicis-tycopersici. Fungus was first grown on unrestricted glucose for three days, then the biomass was or shifted to restricted glucose and, after one day, to restricted galacturonic acid (1) or shifted to pectin (2). Enzyme activity was determined as increase in A235 nm (- -) and by viscosimetry (- -) and determined for 10 min. Figure 1. Time-course of pectin lyase activity in cultures of F. oxysporum f. sp. radicis-tycopersici. Fungus was first grown on unrestricted glucose for three days, then the biomass was or shifted to restricted glucose and, after one day, to restricted galacturonic acid (1) or shifted to pectin (2). Enzyme activity was determined as increase in A235 nm (- -) and by viscosimetry (- -) and determined for 10 min.
It is sometimes claimed that mucilage and similar gels may help to maintain hydraulic conductivity between root and. soil (52). However, the hydraulic conductivity of soils is often substantially decreased when soils are irrigated with waste water. Apart from the inducement of sodicity, which is real in many cases, the decreases in hydraulic conductivity are attributed largely to the production of microbial biomass, particularly extracellular polysaccharides (e.g.. Ref. 53). These extracellular polysaccharides form gels that may store large quantities of water and allow water and ions to diffu.se through them at rates not much less than those of free water, but they could be expected to restrict mass flow of water and thus nutrients, to roots (54). [Pg.29]

The two major leafy crops used for the production of recombinant proteins are tobacco and alfalfa, both of which have high leaf biomass yields in part because they can be cropped several times every year. The main limitation of such crops is that the harvested leaves tend to have a restricted shelf life. The recombinant proteins exist in an aqueous environment and are therefore relatively unstable, which can reduce product yields [16]. For proteins that must be extracted and purified, the leaves need to be dried or frozen for transport, or processed immediately after harvest at the production site. This adds considerably to the processing costs. [Pg.194]

The water deficiency in Arid ecosystems is the main restricting factor for biogeochem-ical exposure processes. We know that many links of the biogeochemical food web are connected in Steppe soils with invertebrates. Their population varies very much in Steppe ecosystems depending on the moisture conditions (Table 6). For instance, the wet biomass of soil invertebrates in the Meadow Steppe and Forest Steppe ecosystems exceeds that for the Extra-Dry Rocky Desert ecosystems by 150-300 times. [Pg.173]

If renewable targets are set, biomass gasification is the cheapest renewable hydrogen supply option however biomass has restricted potential and competition of end-use, for instance, with other biofuels or stationary heat and power generation. Biomass gasification is applied in small decentral plants during the early phase of an infrastructure roll-out and in central plants in later periods. [Pg.446]

Lactic acid fermentation was the topic of a paper by Vaccari et al.35 In this work, lactic acid, glucose, and biomass were determined over the course of the reaction. The measurements were made in real time, using a bypass pump and flow-through cell for the NIR measurements. Instead of using normal chemomet-ric statistics, the authors used correlation coefficients, mean of differences, standard deviation, student s t-test, and the student test parameter of significant difference to evaluate the results. Under these restrictions, the results appeared fairly good, with the biomass having the best set of statistics. [Pg.392]

A4 In practice, the feeding flow Q is restricted in order to avoid the washout condition due to the process overload or the drag of biomass [21]. Since... [Pg.181]

Evans, J. C., and E. E. Prepas. 1997. Relative importance of iron and molybdenum in restricting phytoplankton biomass in high phosphorus saline lakes. Limnology and Oceanography 42 461-472. [Pg.209]


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