教授 博士生导师 硕士生导师
主要任职: 生物工程学院副院长
性别: 男
毕业院校: 大连理工大学
学位: 博士
所在单位: 生物工程学院
学科: 生物化工. 膜科学与技术. 微生物学
联系方式: xue.1@dlut.edu.cn
电子邮箱: xue.1@dlut.edu.cn
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论文类型: 期刊论文
发表时间: 2021-01-11
发表刊物: BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR BIOFUELS
卷号: 6
期号: 1
页面范围: 133
ISSN号: 1754-6834
关键字: VHG fermentation; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Process oscillation; Osmotic stress; Ethanol inhibition
摘要: Background: VHG fermentation is a promising process engineering strategy aiming at improving ethanol titer, and thus saving energy consumption for ethanol distillation and distillage treatment. However, sustained process oscillation was observed during continuous VHG ethanol fermentation, which significantly affected ethanol fermentation performance of the system.
Results: Sustained process oscillation was investigated in continuous VHG ethanol fermentation, and stresses exerted on yeast cells by osmotic pressure from unfermented sugars and ethanol inhibition developed within the fermentation system were postulated to be major factors triggering this phenomenon. In this article, steady state was established for continuous ethanol fermentation with LG medium containing 120 g/L glucose, and then 160 g/L non-fermentable xylose was supplemented into the LG medium to simulate the osmotic stress on yeast cells under the VHG fermentation condition, but the fermentation process was still at steady state, indicating that the impact of osmotic stress on yeast cells was not the main reason for the process oscillation. However, when 30 g/L ethanol was supplemented into the LG medium to simulate the ethanol inhibition in yeast cells under the VHG fermentation condition, process oscillation was triggered, which was augmented with extended oscillation period and exaggerated oscillation amplitude as ethanol supplementation was increased to 50 g/L, but the process oscillation was gradually attenuated when the ethanol supplementations were stopped, and the steady state was restored. Furthermore, gas stripping was incorporated into the continuous VHG fermentation system to in situ remove ethanol produced by Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and the process oscillation was also attenuated, but restored after the gas stripping was interrupted.
Conclusions: Experimental results indicated that ethanol inhibition rather than osmotic stress on yeast cells is one of the main factors triggering the process oscillation under the VHG fermentation condition, and in the meantime gas stripping was validated to be an effective strategy for attenuating the process oscillation.