Novel biobutanol fermentation at a large extractant volume ratio using immobilized Clostridium saccharoperbutylacetonicum N1-4

Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering
Rizki Fitria DarmayantiKenji Sonomoto

Abstract

Product inhibition by butanol and acetone is a known drawback in acetone-butanol-ethanol (ABE) fermentation. Extractive fermentation improves butanol production by several ABE-producing Clostridium spp., but only low volume ratios (<4) of extractant to broth (Ve/Vb) have been studied. Here, a novel extractive fermentation process was developed using Clostridium saccharoperbutylacetonicum N1-4 and a large Ve/Vb ratio. A mixture of oleyl alcohol-tributyrin (1:1 (v/v)) yielded high distribution coefficients for both butanol (3.14) and acetone (0.660). Although a fed-batch culture using free cells and the oleyl alcohol-tributyrin mixture at a Ve/Vb ratio of 5 had a lag phase of >24 h, it produced a higher concentration of total butanol (i.e., butanol produced in all the phases per broth volume used) of 24.2 g/L-broth after 96 h compared with 14.4 g/L-broth at a Ve/Vb ratio of 1, resulting in a low butanol concentration in the aqueous phase. The use of cells immobilized with calcium alginate beads shortened the lag phase to <12 h. Butanol production was achieved not only in a 3-phase mode (extractant, beads, and tryptone-yeast extract-acetate (TYA) medium) but also in a 2-phase mode (extractant and beads containing TYA medium, witho...Continue Reading

References

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