Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Vol.95, No.4, 584-598, 2006
Comparative testing of tangential microfiltration for microbial cultures
In an attempt to extend and intensify the productive periods of bioprocesses, a self-cleaning tangential filtration device was examined. Built into a special-design bioreactor, its cell retention was evaluated for continuous-flow operation with selected examples of bacteria (Escherichia coli), yeasts (Sacharomyces cerevisiae), and filamentous fungi (Aspergillus niger). Performance characteristics such as filtration rates and cell accumulation were assessed as a function of filter rotational speed, operating pressure, cultivation time, and microfilter type (i.e., membrane or porous metallic). The highest flux of cell-free filtrate for each culture type was achieved using a 0.45-micron membrane-covered microfilter. While the respective yeast (S. cerevisiae) and bacterial (E. coh) cell concentrations were enhanced by as much as 16- and 8-fold over the batch growth levels, the representative A. niger fungal cultivation was less satisfactory because of progressively declining filtration rates limited by hydraulically resistant layers of microbial surface growth quite resistant to in situ filter backflushing with gas. Maximum steady-state flux was independent of operating pressure, yet was enhanced at rotational speeds up to about 800 rpm. Higher speeds offered no further improvements. The overall fermentation process was limited by the moderate levels of attainable flux which restricted the feed and dilution rates. The maximum attainable stabilized fluxes were 26-40 L/m(2) (.) h. (c) 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.