High-resolution computation predicts that low dissolved CO concentrations and CO gradients promote ethanol production at industrial-scale gas fermentation

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

6 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Gradients in dissolved gas concentrations are expected to affect the performance of large reactors for anaerobic gas (CO, H2, CO2) fermentation. To study how these gradients, and the dissolved gas concentration level itself, influence the productivity of the desired product ethanol and the product spectrum of C. autoethanogenum, we coupled a CFD model of an industrial-scale gas fermentor to a metabolic kinetic model for a wide range of metabolic regimes. Our model results, together with literature experimental data and a model with constant
dissolved gas concentrations, indicate high ethanol specificity at low dissolved CO concentrations, with acetate reduction to ethanol at very low dissolved CO concentrations and combined ethanol and acetate production at higher CO concentrations. The gradient was predicted to increase both the biomass-specific ethanol production rate and the electron-to-ethanol yield by ~25%. This might be due to intensified ferredoxin and NAD+ redox cycles, with the rate of the Rnf complex – a critical enzyme for energy conservation – as key driver towards
ethanol production, all at the expense of a reduced flux to acetate. We present improved mechanistic understanding of the gas fermentation process, and novel leads for optimization and fundamental research, by coupling observations from various down-scaled lab experiments to expected microbial lifelines in an industrial-scale reactor.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages14
JournalBiochemical Engineering Journal
Volume207
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Gas fermentation
  • Concentration gradients
  • CFD
  • Metabolic modelling
  • Lifelines
  • Industrial

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'High-resolution computation predicts that low dissolved CO concentrations and CO gradients promote ethanol production at industrial-scale gas fermentation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this