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Bioreactor sensing oxygen

Activities associated with bioreactors include gas/hquid contacting, on-hne sensing of concentrations, mixing, heat transfer, foam control, and feed of nutrients or reagents such as those for pH control. The workhorse of the fermentation industry is the conventional batch fermenter shown in Fig. 24-3. Not shown are ladder rungs inside the vessel, antifoam probe, antifoam system, and sensors (pH, dissolved oxygen, temperature, and the like). Note that coils may lie between baffles and the tank wall or connect to the top to minimize openings... [Pg.2135]

Bioprocess Control An industrial fermenter is a fairly sophisticated device with control of temperature, aeration rate, and perhaps pH, concentration of dissolved oxygen, or some nutrient concentration. There has been a strong trend to automated data collection and analysis. Analog control is stiU very common, but when a computer is available for on-line data collec tion, it makes sense to use it for control as well. More elaborate measurements are performed with research bioreactors, but each new electrode or assay adds more work, additional costs, and potential headaches. Most of the functional relationships in biotechnology are nonlinear, but this may not hinder control when bioprocess operate over a narrow range of conditions. Furthermore, process control is far advanced beyond the days when the main tools for designing control systems were intended for linear systems. [Pg.2148]

Bioreactors that use enzymes but not microbial cells could be regarded as fer-mentors in the broadest sense. Although their modes of operation are similar to those of microbial fermentors, fed-batch operation is not practiced for enzyme reactors, because problems such as excessive cell growth rates and resultant high oxygen transfer rates do not exist with enzyme reactors. The basic equations for batch and continuous reactors for enzyme reactions can be derived by combining material balance relationships and the Michaelis-Menten equation for enzyme reactions. [Pg.206]


See other pages where Bioreactor sensing oxygen is mentioned: [Pg.79]    [Pg.428]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.299]    [Pg.366]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.2139]    [Pg.200]    [Pg.496]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.30]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.419 , Pg.432 ]




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