Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAlfred Randall Modified over 9 years ago
1
Expanded Bed Technology for High-rate Bioprocesses
Mike Dempsey School of Biology, Chemistry, & Health Science Manchester Metropolitan University and Advanced Bioprocess Development Ltd. (an MMU spin-out company)
2
Bioprocesses? microbes have a multitude of biochemical and metabolic abilities Escherichia coli (Bacterium, 1 µm long) 6,000 genes 2,000 enzymes.
5
Expanded Bed Technology
fluid-based processing normally liquid gas-phase possible processing of liquids pure or solutions grow cells in nutrient liquid and replace with feedstock or feedstock solution, whilst retaining cells in bioreactor particulates.
6
Programme Topics materials processing energy production
waste processing and bioremediation corrosion resistance production of drugs manufacture of polymers.
7
Programme Topics materials processing?
oxidation of reduced sulphur minerals to yield sulphuric acid and dissolved metals.
8
Programme Topics energy production? ethanol (biodiesel) methane.
9
Programme Topics waste processing and bioremediation?
liquid organic wastes to methane-rich biogas biological wastewater treatment.
10
Programme Topics production of drugs? antibiotics
secreted heterologous products? e.g. proteins plant cell metabolites?.
11
Expanded Bed Technology
method of process intensification 10-fold increase in biomass concentration 10-fold decrease in bioreactor size fixed biofilm system no need for biomass recovery & recycle natural immobilization on glassy coke naturally-adhesive microbes biomass retention cheap media expanded bed does not clog no backwashing.
12
Attachment and Biofilm Formation
Ethanol-producing bacterium: Zymomonas mobilis Ethanol-producing yeasts: Saccharomyces cerevisiae (top) S. diastaticus (bottom)
13
Particulate Biofilm Technology
fixed film process method of process intensification retention of biomass by attached growth attachment to support particles microbes grow as a biofilm formation of particulate biofilms biofilm coke
14
Biomass Support Medium: Glassy Coke
carbonized bituminous coal light (SG 1.2) carbon-based (90% C + 10% ash) porous (interconnecting pores: carbon foam) initial colonisation of pores overgrowth to form complete biofilm sand heavy (SG 2.65) & non-porous.
15
No Biomass Support Medium? = unstable
17
Static Bed zero to low flow
18
Expanded Bed (< 100%) medium flow zero to low flow
19
Fluidized Bed (> 100%) medium flow zero to low flow high flow
20
Transition from static to expanded bed, as pump switched on
21
Expanded bed: note retention of bioparticles
22
Expanded bed: biofilm thickness control
23
Pilot-scale (0.6 m3 expanded bed)
24
Full-scale package plant (10 m3 expanded bed)
25
Enzyme & Biodiesel Production
Early biofilm-formation in pores of glassy coke: transesterase-producing, thermophilic bacteria.
26
Fuel Ethanol production
Ethanol-producing bacterium: Zymomonas mobilis (thick biofilm on glassy coke)
27
Fuel Ethanol production
28
Fuel Ethanol production
29
Shewanella putrefaciens bioparticles for wastewater treatment
30
Biocatalysis. e. g. with mono-oxygenase
Biocatalysis? e.g. with mono-oxygenase? (ammonia mono-oxygenase producer)
31
Summary generic technology with wide variety of applications
fluid-based processing liquid (or gas) fluidization of small particles causes bed expansion attachment of microbes to particles; growth as biofilm high biomass concentration excellent mixing and mass transfer highly active biomass high-rate, compact process technology.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.