Accepted Manuscript Review Microbial synthesis gas utilization and ways to resolve kinetic and mass-transfer limitations Muhammad Yasin, Yeseul Jeong, Shinyoung Park, Jiyeong Jeong, Eun Yeol Lee, Robert W. Lovitt, Byung Hong Kim, Jinwon Lee, In Seop Chang PII: DOI: Reference:
S0960-8524(14)01624-1 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2014.11.022 BITE 14228
To appear in:
Bioresource Technology
Received Date: Revised Date: Accepted Date:
23 September 2014 6 November 2014 8 November 2014
Please cite this article as: Yasin, M., Jeong, Y., Park, S., Jeong, J., Lee, E.Y., Lovitt, R.W., Kim, B.H., Lee, J., Chang, I.S., Microbial synthesis gas utilization and ways to resolve kinetic and mass-transfer limitations, Bioresource Technology (2014), doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2014.11.022
This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.
1
Microbial synthesis gas utilization and ways to resolve kinetic and mass-
2
transfer limitations
3
Muhammad Yasina, Yeseul Jeonga, Shinyoung Parka, Jiyeong Jeonga, Eun Yeol Leeb,
4
Robert W. Lovittc, Byung Hong Kimd, Jinwon Leee, In Seop Changa,*
5
a. School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology, Republic of Korea
6
b. Department of Chemical Engineering, Kyung Hee University, Gyeonggi-do 446-701, Republic of Korea
7
c. College of Engineering, Swansea University, Swansea SA2 8PP, United Kingdom
8
d. Fuel Cell Institute, National University of Malaysia, 43600 UKM, Bangi, Malaysia
9
e. Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Sogang University, Seoul, 121-742, Republic of Korea
10
*Corresponding author:
[email protected]
11 12
Abstract Microbial conversion of syngas to energy-dense biofuels and valuable chemicals is a
13
potential technology for the efficient utilization of fossils (e.g., coal) and renewable resources
14
(e.g., lignocellulosic biomass) in an environmentally friendly manner. However, gas-liquid mass
15
transfer and kinetic limitations are still major constraints that limit the widespread adoption and
16
successful commercialization of the technology. This review paper provides rationales for syngas
17
bioconversion and summarizes the reaction limited conditions along with the possible strategies
18
to overcome these challenges. Mass transfer and economic performances of various reactor
19
configurations are compared, and an ideal case for optimum bioreactor operation is presented.
20
Overall, the challenges with the bioprocessing steps are highlighted, and potential solutions are
21
suggested. Future research directions are provided and a conceptual design for a membrane-
22
based syngas biorefinery is proposed.
23
Keywords: Syngas fermentation; C1 biorefinery; Acetogens; Mass transfer limitations; Hollow
24
fiber membrane bioreactor
25 26
1. Introduction A tremendous increase in energy demand has been witnessed across the globe due to rapid
27
increases in the world population and growing industrialization. The primary energy
28
requirements are fulfilled by utilizing petroleum reserves which are on the verge of extinction
29
and are estimated to be exhausted in less than 50 years; if continuously used at the present
30
consumption rate (Demirbas, 2007). Using fossil energy resources such as coal results in the
31
enormous release of hazardous and toxic compounds that create an unhealthy environment for
32
the biota on the earth. However, coal reserves, which are six-fold greater than petroleum
33
reserves, should be considered as a short term energy source to be used in an environmentally
34
friendly manner (Kim & Chang, 2009). Petroleum reserves are also able to be saved by
35
introducing alternative biofuels from carbohydrates present in lignocellulosic biomass, while
36
environmental concerns caused by coal can be addressed by developing effective and
37
environmentally friendly processes. One possible alternative is to use a hybrid process that
38
involves the simultaneous conversion of organic matter (from coal and biomass) into synthesis
39
gas (syngas) via gasification followed by biological conversion utilizing microorganisms that are
40
able to convert major components of syngas (CO and H2) into multi-carbon compounds (Henstra
41
et al., 2007). Agricultural residues and woody biomass are not applicable for direct microbial
42
conversion due to poor biodegradability of the lignin moiety called “recalcitrance”; however,
43
lignin is one of the most energy rich components and creates 10 to 20% of the entire biomass
44
present in nature (Daniell et al., 2012). Lignin content of biomass can be utilized effectively in
45
syngas-based biorefinery.
46
Syngas is used as a feed stock for the production of useful chemicals such as acetic and
47
butyric acids and energy dense biofuels (i.e., ethanol and butanol) either by chemical catalytic
48
conversion (e.g., Fischer-Tropsch (FT) Synthesis) or biological conversion routes. Biological
49
syngas fermentation is considered to be more attractive due to its several inherent merits
50
compared with the biochemical approach (enzymatic hydrolysis) and the FT process. Biological
51
catalysts ferment syngas into liquid fuels effectively and efficiently compared with the use of
52
chemical catalysts and require less energy and infrastructure set-up costs (Henstra et al., 2007).
53
In addition, chemical composition differences of biomass are eliminated in the gasification
54
process which enables the utilization of biomass from a variety of resources for biological
55
conversion, which is typically called syngas fermentation. The microbial conversion of CO or H2
56
to multi-carbon compounds occurs through the “Acetyl-CoA pathway”, which uses CO2 as a
57
terminal electron acceptor for ATP (adenosine triphosphate) generation; therefore, microbial
58
“respiration” is technically more accurate than “fermentation”. However, “syngas fermentation”
59
is widely accepted and used by biotechnologists and process engineers (Yasin et al., 2014).
60
Biological production of gaseous fuel (i.e., hydrogen) is also possible through water gas shift
61
(WGS) reaction. Many thermophilic bacteria and archea have already been isolated that produce
62
H2 through biological WGS reactions using CO as a reactant (Henstra et al., 2007). Due to high
63
specific energy, the process development for biological conversion of CO into H2 has equal
64
importance in achieving the long term goal of future CO biorefinery.
65
The production of sustainable and renewable biofuels and valuable chemicals can be
66
realized by using versatile feed stock resources for syngas fermentation; however, low
67
achievable cell density in fermentation media due to the poor mass transfer rate of sparingly
68
soluble gases (CO and H2) is still big hurdle in the successful design and operation of large scale
69
process (Bredwell et al., 1999; Daniell et al., 2012). Chang et al. (2001) reported that low cell
70
concentrations are associated with poor mass transfer of the gaseous substrates, while gas-liquid
71
mass transfer (GL-MT) is the most dominant factor in fermentation broths containing higher cell
72
concentrations (Abubackar et al., 2011). Thus, designing and operating commercial syngas
73
fermentation facilities at high GL-MT conditions is strongly desired.
74
Generally, GL-MT limits the conversion rates in bioprocesses that use sparingly soluble
75
gases as key components such as; carbon and energy sources (CO or H2 in homoacetogens; CH4
76
in methylotrophs) or electron acceptors for ATP generation (O2 in aerobic respiration). The
77
utilization of these sparingly soluble substrates is often a mass transfer-limited process when
78
dissolved gases are not sufficiently large to support microbial requirements that are expressed by
79
two terms, specific substrate consumption rate ( ) and cell concentration (X). Vega et al. (1989b)
80
explained multiple steps during gas to liquid mass transfer phenomenon, which requires the
81
absorption of a gaseous substrate across the gas-liquid interface (I), the transfer of the dissolved
82
gas to the fermentation media (II) and diffusion through the culture media to the cell surface.
83
Although the relative magnitudes of the mass transfer resistances depend on the composition and
84
rheological properties of the liquid, mixing intensity, bubble size, interfacial adsorption and other
85
factors, the most sparingly soluble gases utilized in the biochemical reaction cause major
86
resistance in the liquid film around the gas-liquid interface (Klasson et al., 1992; Munasinghe &
87
Khanal, 2010a; Vega et al., 1989b).
88
To date, much effort has focused on increasing the volumetric GL-MT coefficient (kLa), in
89
gas-utilizing bioprocesses. When gas is sparged through a liquid, the kLa principally depends on
90
the size and number of bubbles present, which are affected by many factors such as agitation
91
speed (Robinson & Wilke, 1973), gas flow rate (Yagi & Yoshida, 1975), reactor geometry
92
(Klasson et al., 1992) and the nature of the liquid (Bredwell et al., 1997). Most of these methods
93
rely on increasing the interfacial surface area available for the mass transfer and boost the bubble
94
breakup by increasing the agitator’s power input to volume ratio. This approach, however, may
95
not be practical on commercial scale due to high energy as well as infra cost requirements. To
96
achieve energy efficient and high mass transferred conditions, alternative bioreactor
97
configurations have been investigated for syngas fermentation (Bredwell et al., 1999;
98
Munasinghe & Khanal, 2010b; Orgill et al., 2013). The efficiency of mass transfer rate in these
99
reactors was observed through hydrodynamic conditions within reactors by predicting the kLa
100
(Munasinghe & Khanal, 2010b).
101
The suitability of a proposed reactor system for GL-MT applications is founded on its
102
capability to correlate with the reaction kinetics. A bioreactor for these gaseous systems must
103
operate in either of two regimes (Klasson et al., 1992). The first case includes the mass transfer
104
limited, which occurs when sufficient cell mass is produced in the system to react with more
105
solute, but the mass-transfer rate cannot keep pace; therefore, the liquid phase concentration goes
106
to almost zero, and the cell concentration and rate of consumption are limited by the ability of
107
that particular reactor to transfer substrate. However, in the other case, sufficient gaseous
108
substrate is delivered to the reaction system, but the cell concentrations are not sufficient to allow
109
an equal consumption rate making the conversion process kinetically limited (Ungerman &
110
Heindel, 2007). Then the liquid phase concentration increases to reach the saturation point,
111
promoting the condition of no driving force for mass transfer. In addition, if the saturation
112
concentration shows a substrate inhibitory effect on microbes (substrate inhibition), is
113
retarded in that particular bioreactor.
114
The application of various reactor schemes to achieve high mass transfer is more
115
practical and viable. Among the reactors, stirred tank reactors (STR) offer linear increase in kLa
116
by increasing the agitation speed which results in a cubic increase in the power requirement
117
(Orgill et al., 2013). Bubble column reactors (BCR)/gas spargers also produce higher kLa
118
through increase in substrate intake flow rates. However, the power required for fluid (gas or
119
liquid) circulation through pumps increases linearly with an increase in the flow rate, causing a
120
linear increase in the cost (Kim et al., 2010a). The economic attractiveness of a biological
121
process lies in the development of optimal bioreactor design that permits high gas-liquid mass
122
transfer, high cell concentrations and high product concentrations in short residence times under
123
no substrate limiting and inhibitory conditions.
124
Recent studies regarding membrane bioreactors (MBR) for syngas fermentation have
125
suggested that reactors installed hollow fiber membranes (HFM) as gas diffusers as a potential
126
alternative to the widely commercially employed STR and the less common BCR and trickle bed
127
reactors (TBR) (Munasinghe & Khanal, 2010b; Orgill et al., 2013; Shen et al., 2014b; Yasin et
128
al., 2014). The performance of hollow fiber membrane bioreactors (HFMBR) in terms of mass
129
transfer outcompete conventional reactors. Downstream processing steps in syngas fermentation
130
also require research attention for the successful commercialization of the technology.
131
Pervaporation is a membrane-based technology that offers an opportunity for the separation of
132
volatile organic compounds (VOC) and solvents from the fermentation broths at much lower
133
costs than distillation (Vane, 2005).
134
Due to the higher potential for energy production and sustainability, the microbial conversion
135
of biomass into valuable fuels and chemicals using syngas fermentation has been widely studied.
136
Previous review reports (Abubackar et al., 2011; Daniell et al., 2012; Mohammadi et al., 2011;
137
Munasinghe & Khanal, 2010a) have introduced the fundamental issues of syngas fermentation.
138
However, poor GL-MT and kinetic limited conditions, which are still the primary barriers in the
139
commercialization of syngas technology need to be summarized for the researchers working on
140
the bioprocess design and scale up. This paper provides the rationales for syngas fermentation by
141
considering the feedstock quality and process microbiology for the biological conversion of
142
syngas. The fundamental aspects of GL-MT reactions are presented, and fermentation limited
143
conditions are described. Various strategies to overcome each limitation are discussed, while an
144
ideal case for optimum bioreactor operation is presented. Mass transfer performance and power
145
consumption by various reactor configurations are summarized and compared. Finally, the
146
overall challenges with each bioprocessing step are highlighted along with the potential
147
strategies to resolve these problems. Future research directions are provided and a conceptual
148
design for a hybrid membrane-based syngas biorefinery is proposed.
149
2. Rationale for syngas fermentation
150
2.1. Feed-stock quality
151
Syngas is produced by the gasification of any type of organic matter from fossil and
152
renewable resources, and is primarily comprised of CO, CO2 and H2 (Park et al., 2013). Trace
153
amounts of NOx, SOx, tar, char, particulate matters (PM), C2 hydrocarbons (C2H2, C2H4 and
154
C2H6), higher hydrocarbons (C6H6), NH3, HCN, chlorine compounds and water are also detected
155
in the gasification process (Daniell et al., 2012). The components of syngas are found in various
156
compositions depending upon type and quality of feed stocks, operating conditions in the gasifier
157
and overall steps conducted for the gasification process. Gasification is fully matured and
158
commercialized in the area of gas conversion and utilizing process. The final product
159
composition from the gasification process is adjusted by changing the types of gasifier system
160
(e.g., fixed bed, fluidized bed, etc.), using diverse feed stocks, and/or by maintaining the
161
operating parameters (e.g., temperature, pressure, etc.) (Abubackar et al., 2011). The typical
162
methods to restrict the composition of syngas to CO and H2 which are the primary components
163
for biological fermentation process, involves the optimization of the gasification process
164
conditions (Abubackar et al., 2011), bio-syngas production at temperatures of 1100°C (Kim &
165
Chang, 2009), coal gasification at 1500-1800°C (Kim & Chang, 2009) and partial oxidation of
166
biomass using oxygen/steam as the gasifying agents (Latif et al., 2014). N2 free syngas is
167
produced using pure oxygen at the risk of high operating costs (Girard & Fallot, 2006).
168
2.2. Process microbiology
169
Microbes, mostly anaerobes, are used as biocatalysts to produce valuable metabolites, such
170
as organic acids (acetic, butyric, formic acids) and alcohols (ethanol and butanol) from syngas
171
fermentation (Table 1). These products are primarily end products during catabolic reaction
172
indicating that they are produced during the ATP synthesis steps. Micro-organisms generally
173
synthesize the ATP through, “substrate level phosphorylation (SLP)”, or “electron transport
174
phosphorylation (ETP)”, in their energy metabolism (Latif et al., 2014). ATP synthesis through,
175
an alternate mechanism, i.e., “chemical osmoisis” or “flavin-based electron bifurcation (FBEB)”,
176
is verified in several acetogens (Latif et al., 2014). During FBEB, a key electron transfer agent of
177
anaerobic microbes (i.e., reduced form of ferredoxin (Fd)), with high redox potential is
178
generated, and is used for making ion motive force, termed as ATP synthesis. Difference in
179
energy generation mechanism possibly leads to the diverse products formation in
180
microorganisms. When syngas is used as sole carbon and energy source, acetyl-CoA is
181
synthesized as a key intermediate, by the reductive acetyl-CoA (Wood-Ljungdahl) pathway,
182
which has been hypothesized to anciently present in autotrophs before photosynthesis. CO and
183
H2 are the energy sources for these microbes since 1 billion years before photosynthesis, which is
184
believed to have evolved 3.8 billion years ago (Ragsdale & Pierce, 2008). During this energy-
185
conserving process, CO2 is reduced as the terminal electron acceptor to acetyl-CoA, which is
186
further reduced to create single and multi-carbon compounds, to consume reducing power.
187
Anaerobic microorganisms (bacteria and archea) also produce energy carrier H2 via
188
biological WGS reaction (Table 1). H2 production through the biological WGS reaction utilizes
189
CO, which is the major component of the gasified syngas. Biological WGS for H2 production
190
became a rising issue due to the versatile use of H2 as a primary energy carrier material and
191
higher specific energy than coal and petroleum (Demirel, 2012), and the relatively fast CO
192
conversion rates under thermophilic conditions for H2 production. Thermophiles do not only
193
have higher growth and metabolic rates than mesophiles but they are also less prone to
194
contamination, which is a major issue in pure culture fermentation processes. The
195
hyperthermophilic archaeon, Thermococcus onnurineus NA1, isolated from a deep sea thermal
196
vent, has unique hydrogenases and formate dehydrogenases, which overcome thermodynamic
197
limitations of CO conversion to H2 when a proton is used as an electron acceptor under high
198
temperature (Kim et al., 2010b).
199
3. Bioprocess scale-up: from bench to industry
200
The last decade of research has focused on CO fermentation, and fundamentals of syngas
201
conversion pathways are well understood and communicated. A paradigm shift of research
202
interests from fundamentals to practical applications in syngas/CO based biorefinery has
203
occurred. Current and future research on syngas fermentation should be focussed to overcome
204
the primary hurdles in the bioprocess scale-up for commercialization. Poor gas-liquid mass
205
transfer, low achievable cell concentrations, toxic substrate inhibition and economical product
206
separation are the real bottle necks that need to be addressed for the successful
207
commercialization of the syngas fermentation technology.
208
3.1. Gas-liquid mass transfer reaction
209
Biorefinery of syngas components (CO, CO2 and H2) is a heterogeneous system
210
consisting of gaseous substrate, liquid fermentation media and solid cells. The mass transfer of
211
the substrate from the gas bubble to the reaction site in a cell is a complex process involving a
212
series of resistances at a micro scale (Doran, 1995). However, syngas mass transfer through these
213
resistances is considered to be controlled by only the liquid film across the gas-liquid interface
214
(RL) (Klasson et al., 1992; Munasinghe & Khanal, 2010a; Vega et al., 1989b). All of the other
215
resistances are minor; therefore, they can be neglected. The overall volumetric rate of mass
216
transfer (R) of the sparingly soluble gaseous substrates through liquid film is the function of
217
driving force (∆P or ∆C) times kLa as depicted by equation 4 (Table 2). Table 2 shows the
218
leading mass balance equations that are used to represent the delivery of gaseous substrates to
219
the liquid fermentation media. The relationship between the substrates delivery rate and
220
substrates consumption under biotic conditions is also provided. Reducing the RL to create high
221
dissolved substrate conditions inside the bioreactor is highly desired because the microbes can
222
uptake the gaseous substrates only in liquid form. RL is effectively reduced by either increasing
223
the driving force or kLa as depicted in equation 5.
224
3.2 Bioreactor operation and fermentation limited conditions
225
Design of a suitable bioreactor system is a core step for the successful operation of the
226
syngas conversion bioprocess. The suitability of a proposed reactor system for GL-MT
227
applications or absorption is founded on its capability to match with the reaction kinetics, and the
228
mass transfer capabilities of these bioreactors are determined by a key parameter, kLa.
229 230
Bioreactor operations for gaseous systems should be considered to be in either of two regimes in accordance with equations 13 and 14 (Klasson et al., 1992). The first case is the mass
231
transfer-limited regime; which occurs when the cell mass in the system is greater than the solute,
232
but the mass-transfer rate cannot keep pace supporting the microbial activity; therefore, the
233
solute concentration in the liquid phase decreases. In the other case, kinetically limited regime,
234
the high mass transfer reactor system delivers sufficient gaseous substrate to the microorganisms,
235
but the lower cell concentrations in the fermentation media do not provide equal consumption
236
rates. As a result, the concentration of the gaseous substrate in the fermentation media reaches
237
the saturation value, making the conditions of no driving force creation for the mass transfer. In
238
addition, higher concentrations of solute show a substrate inhibitory effect on the microbes,
239
causing a decrease in the specific substrate consumption rate, . CO is a substrate that shows a
240
substrate inhibitory effect above a critical concentration because CO inhibits metalloenzymes by
241
forming stable complexes, resulting in reduced enzyme activity (Ragsdale, 2004). Notably, most
242
enzymes in the acetyl-CoA pathway possess redox activities due to their metallic centers (Evans,
243
2005). The optimal bioreactor designs permits high GL-MT and high cell concentrations under
244
no substrate limiting and inhibitory conditions.
245
3.2.1. Mass transfer limitation as a major problem and solutions to overcome this limitation
246
Higher productivities of a bioprocess are strongly dependent on the high mass transfer
247
rate and high cell concentration (Liu et al., 2014). Low mass transfer rates of gaseous substrates
248
in the fermentation media lead to reduced cell concentrations (equation 7). The gas-liquid mass
249
transfer was the most limiting factor in the syngas fermentation reaction, leading to reduced
250
productivity (Abubackar et al., 2011; Munasinghe & Khanal, 2010a). CO conversion
251
performance of Carboxydothermus hydrogenoforans in a gas lift reactor (GLR) was limited by
252
the low cell concentrations (Haddad et al., 2014). Thus, in order to achieve an optimum
253
bioprocess design, the reaction system should not experience the mass transfer limitations.
254
Various strategies have been adopted to increase the GL-MT rates. The economic and practical
255
viability of these approaches should be evaluated for their applications in large scale syngas
256
fermentation systems.
257
Bioreactors that achieve high mass transfer rates and high cell concentrations are desirable
258
for syngas fermentation (Klasson et al., 1992). The highest kLa for GL-MT reactions have been
259
achieved by using different reactor configurations (Orgill et al., 2013). Mechanical agitation used
260
in STR is the most common method that is applied to enhance gas-liquid, liquid-liquid, and
261
liquid-solid mixing in the industrial reactors. Maximum kLa achieved by mechanical agitation for
262
GL-MT systems are summarized in Table 3a.
263
Although continuous stirred tank reactors (CSTRs) are widely used, they do have
264
intrinsic limitations that make them unsuitable for many microbial applications using a gaseous
265
substrate. A high level of power-to-volume ratio in the agitator and rotational speeds of the
266
impellers to enhance the mass transfer between the substrate and the microbes is not
267
economically feasible for large reactors being considered for commercial syngas fermentations,
268
primarily because of excessive power costs (Bredwell et al., 1999). The degree of agitation
269
required to provide sufficient GL-MT for microbial growth may also damage sensitive
270
microorganisms (Munasinghe & Khanal, 2012). CSTRs also have operating limitations such as
271
biomass wash out at short hydraulic retention times and achievement of low biomass
272
concentration in gas system (Wang & Wan, 2009). Stirred tanks often exhibit poor mixing in
273
tanks with large diameters and in multiphase reactions where the non-uniformity in mixing and
274
mass transfer leads to significant variance in reaction rate and selectivity.
275 276
Efforts have been made to achieve high GL-MT without agitation using TBR and BCR/GLR as shown in Table 3b. These types of reactors do not require mechanical agitation;
277
therefore, the power consumption of these reactors is lower than the STR. Bubble columns or
278
gas-lift systems are commonly used in industrial processes, both as reactors or absorbers,
279
whenever a large liquid retention time and/or a large liquid holdup are needed.
280
The achievable range of kLa using microbubble spargers (MBS) (200-1800 h-1) is much
281
higher than that of STR (10-500 h-1) (Bredwell et al., 1999). More than 40% of the research
282
conducted in the last decade (2005-2014) focused on the application of microporous hollow fiber
283
membranes (HFM) as the microbubble-generating system to achieve high GL-MT in syngas
284
fermentation (Table 4). The results suggested that the HFMBR may be the best alternatives of
285
agitation-based reactors for use in high GL-MT applications.
286
3.2.1.1. HFMBR
287
Recent research studies on the HFMBR have suggested that the MBRs have the potential
288
to replace the energy intensive, agitation-based systems used for high GL-MT applications. One
289
of the significant and recognized benefits of using the HFMBR as gas diffuser is its low or even
290
no direct energy consumption as the substrate gas can be pressurized directly to the reactor
291
through the storage cylinders. The working principle of HFMBR for GL-MT applications is
292
similar to membrane contactors where two phases are brought into contact to promote mass
293
transfer (Buonomenna, 2013). In syngas fermentation, the gas-liquid contact can occur either by
294
using inside-out or outside-in reactor configurations. In inside-out configuration, the gaseous
295
substrate is pressurized through the lumen of the HFM and diffuses directly into the fermentation
296
media across the wall of the membrane (Lee et al., 2012b; Orgill et al., 2013; Yasin et al., 2014).
297
Regarding outside-in configuration, the gaseous feed is supplied from the shell side of the HFM
298
and diffuses into the fermentation media circulated throughout the HFM lumen (Munasinghe &
299
Khanal, 2012). The choice of a suitable HFM has its own importance regardless of the type of
300
reactor configuration used. Hydrophobic membrane materials such as polypropylene (PP),
301
polyethylene (PE), and polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) are preferred compared with hydrophilic
302
materials due to their inherent advantages such as no pore wetting, less prone to biofouling and
303
ease in gas permeation (Yasin et al., 2014). The use of both porous and non-porous membrane
304
structure is possible to achieve high GL-MT. Non-porous structures are more stable and efficient
305
when high pressurized conditions are desired. The fabrication of hollow fiber membrane module
306
(HFMM) is another aspect that needs to be considered along with the membrane material and the
307
HFMBR configuration. Membrane modules are fabricated either in dead-end or open-end
308
configurations. An open-end configuration, however, leads to the higher loss of substrate gas.
309
Performance of HFMBR in terms of kLa outcompete all other reactor configurations
310
(Table 4). Shen et al. (2014b) achieved a kLa of 1096.2 h-1 using PP hollow fiber membranes.
311
This study has utilized Clostridium carboxidivorans P7 for biological conversion of syngas and
312
produced an ethanol concentration of 23.93 g L-1 with an ethanol to acetic acid ratio of 4.79.
313
Yasin et al. (2014) recently developed a simple high mass transfer HFMBR configuration
314
capable of supporting microbial conversion. This study introduced a novel idea to achieve high
315
driving force inside the reactor at low substrate pressures through the HFM lumen by increasing
316
the headspace pressure inside of the reactor.
317
3.2.2. Intrinsic kinetics as a substrate limitation and inhibition mechanism
318
Inhibition in the fermentation media is typically caused by the toxic nature of the
319
substrates and/or by the products and other contaminants. As a result, the specific microbial
320
growth rate (µ), and product formation rate are slowed or inhibited. Substrate inhibition
321
occurs during the initial oxidation of the electron donor substrates (Rittmann & MeCarty, 2005)
322
and reduces or stops the oxidation of the electron donor either by competitive or non-competitive
323
inhibition, resulting in slow substrate consumption rates (Rittmann & MeCarty, 2005). Several
324
microorganisms, such as “acetogens” that grow chemoautrophically on CO, are inhibited by high
325
dissolved concentrations of CO. CO has a high affinity to metal ions and potentially binds with
326
the cofactors of the CO-oxidizing enzymes and inhibits metalloenzymes by forming irreversible
327
complexes, which reduces their maximal activity (Ragsdale, 2004). The Andrews model (Table
328
2: equation 15 and 16) which is the modified form of the Monod equation, is used to determine
329
the intrinsic kinetic parameters, Ks (saturation constant) and Ki (inhibition constant), which are
330
further utilized to identify optimum concentrations of dissolved substrates in the fermentation
331
media using (Andrews, 1968). The optimal dissolved CO concentrations (CL) for the
332
fermentation of P. productus was reported to be equivalent to 0.8 atm of partial pressure of CO
333
(PCO) using the non-completive substrate inhibition model proposed by Andrews (Vega et al.,
334
1988). Later Chang et al. (2001) and Younesi et al. (2005) found the maximal specific CO
335
uptakes ( ) by Eubacterium limosum KIST612 and Clostridium ljungdahlii, respectively and
336
confirmed the non-competitive substrate inhibition in CO fermentation. The optimum CL to
337
obtain the maximum specific growth rate (µ max) and by E. limosum KIST612 was 1atm
338
(Chang et al., 2001), whereas an ideal activity of C. ljungdahlii in terms of was retarded
339
after 2 mM CL (Younesi et al., 2005). High pressure fermentation is detrimental when CL value is
340
greater than the kinetic requirements of the microbes; therefore, identifying the optimum CL to
341
design and control large scale fermenters is necessary. Substrate inhibition can be avoided by using a high mass transfer system capable of
342 343
supporting high cell density cultures, and high cell concentrations can be achieved in a
344
continuous cell recycled system (CCRS). The highest reported concentrations of ethanol (48 g L-
345
1
346
concentrations of 4 g L-1 (Phillips et al., 1993) were much higher than the levels produced in a
347
continuous syngas fermentation system without cell recycle (6 g L-1 ethanol at 2.3 g L-1 of cell
) that were achieved during syngas fermentation by C. ljungdahlii using a CCRS under cell
348
concentration) (Mohammadi et al., 2012). This finding showed the potential of using CCRS to
349
achieve high cell and product concentrations. Clostridium ragsdalei fermentation in a two-stage
350
CCRS yielded 15 g ethanol per g of cells (Kundiyana et al., 2011), which is comparable to 12 g
351
ethanol per g of cells obtained by Phillips et al. (1993) with C. ljungdahlii. A CCRS using mixed
352
culture and dominant with Alaklibacterium bacchi strain CP15 produced 6 g L-1 of ethanol (Liu
353
et al., 2014). However, the maximum attainable cell mass and product yields using CCRS
354
depends on the type of microorganism, the syngas composition and operating conditions of the
355
bioreactor. For example, the CO fermentation by E. limosum KIST612 only produced 0.3 g L-1
356
ethanol in a CCRS with a 4 g L-1 cell mass (Chang et al., 2001). Excessive loss of the nutrients
357
during a CCRS also needs careful economic evaluation.
358 359
3.2.3. Membrane biofilm reactor (MBfR): A potential alternative to resolve kinetic and mass transfer limitations
360
In conventional HFMBfR, the substrate gas is pressurized through the lumen of the fibers
361
and diffused directly in to the fermentation media through the walls of the membrane. Microbial
362
communities grow and attach to the membrane as aggregates and flocks resulting in the
363
formation of biofilm on the outer surface of hollow fibers, which are immersed in the
364
fermentation media. Here, HFM plays a bi-functional role as a gas diffuser and support for
365
microbial biofilm formation. Once the biofilm is fully developed, the gas diffused through the
366
membrane is taken up by the microbes within the biofilm and yields fermentation products such
367
as acitic acid and ethanol (Munasinghe & Khanal, 2010a).
368
MBfRs are a quite mature technology for water and wastewater treatment applications,
369
and one commercial scale facility, ARONiteTM has already been developed (Martin &
370
Nerenberg, 2012); yet, their applications in syngas fermentation for the transfer of CO, H2 and
371
CO2 are rarely found. One study has been reported regarding the production of medium chain
372
fatty acids in MBfR using H2 and CO2 as the substrates (Zhang et al., 2013). This study has used
373
the concept of microbial biofilm development using a mixed culture from a methane production
374
reactor operated under mesophilic conditions. The results showed 100% H2 utilization within
375
0.012 g biofilm, after 24 hours of continuous operation. Shen et al. (2014b) used a continuous
376
HFMBfR for syngas fermentation of C. carboxidivorans P7 and produced the highest
377
concentrations and productivity of ethanol (3.44 g per L-day) using the same strain. A recently
378
reported study also utilized an HFMBfR for the production of H2 from CO using a pure culture
379
of Clostridium hydrogenoformans (Zhao et al., 2013). The continuous uptake of CO within the
380
biofilm resulted in very low concentrations of dissolved CO in the liquid, improving the
381
permeation of the colonized membrane by three orders of magnitude as compared with the
382
abiotic membrane. The volumetric activity of C. hydrogenoformans in a GLR with suspended
383
growth was found to be 18-fold lower than the activity of a biofilm-based system. The outcome
384
of the above mentioned studies regarding HFMBfR have successfully demonstrated the
385
superiority of a biofilm (attached growth) reactor over suspended growth reactors.
386
4. Ideal bioreactor operation
387
In general, bioreactors adhering perfect mixing conditions with even distribution of nutrients
388
and dissolved substrates are expected to produce homogeneous productivities throughout the
389
reactor. However, real fermentation conditions may experience substrate limitation and
390
inhibitory conditions simultaneously in different parts of the reactor (Figure 1, left), depending
391
upon the availability of the dissolved substrate concentrations inside the reactor (Figure 1, right).
392
Microbial syngas conversion should follow the Monod kinetics under non-substrate limitation
393
and non-inhibitory conditions. However, CO is a well-known self-inhibitory substrate that
394
inhibits the specific microbial growth and substrate consumption rates in a non-competitive
395
manner. Therefore, a CO-fed bioreactor for microbial fermentation would be operated in either
396
of three of the following possible scenarios as shown in Figure 1 (right): substrate limited region
397
A ( < ), ideal substrate region ( = ) and substrate inhibitory region B
398
( > ). For an ideal bioreactor operation to achieve maximum productivity, the
399
dissolved CO inside the reactor maintained at should be continuously consumed.
400
However, these conditions may lead to region B due to dissolved substrate accumulation when
401
the microbial community does not provide equal consumption rates. The bioreactor operation in
402
region B is more likely to produce reduced productivities along with additional substrate loss.
403
The presence of higher amounts of substrate gas in the product also causes high downstream
404
separation costs. The most economically optimum operating regime for bioreactors for syngas
405
fermentation corresponds to the conditions where ≤ . However, microorganisms under
406
this regime may experience the substrate limitation near the top of the bioreactor.
407
5. Overall challenges, strategies to resolve and future research directions
408
5.1. Microbial catalysts
409
The successful development and commercialization of a syngas biorefinery require the
410
development of robust microorganisms capable of producing higher yields of valuable chemicals,
411
materials and fuels. One of the major challenges associated with the existing syngas conversion
412
microorganisms is multiple product formation and lower yields (Table 1). Lower product
413
concentrations in the fermentation broth increase the products recovery costs, while the
414
production of undesired products causes additional costs for desired product separation and the
415
management of undesired products. To address these issues “Synthetic biology techniques” and
416
“metabolic engineering tools” have become very hot issues and several approaches have been
417
conducted to create recombinant strains to show strain development. These approaches are aimed
418
at the metabolic pathway shift for the production of desired chemicals and to improve the
419
robustness of the microbial strains. Genetic modification methods are applied to the microbial
420
strains in order to: accelerate the substrate consumption and the metabolic flux (I), increase the
421
productivity (II), produce more reduced form of product e.g., ethanol and butanol (III) and,
422
produce desired, non-native products by introducing new bio-circuit from foreign DNA.
423
Successful genetic transformation of Moorella thermoacetica has recently been reported for the
424
production of non-native products using genetic engineering tools (Kita et al., 2013). Among
425
acetogens, C. ljungdahlii, an ethanol producer, was genetically modified for butanol production
426
using a gene from C. acetobutylicum (Nagarajan et al., 2013). Genetic modification of
427
Clostridium autoethanogenum resulted in the production of 26 mM butanol (Liew et al., 2013), a
428
non-native product. Alcohol tolerance of this strain was enhanced by introducing alcohol
429
tolerance genes in the wild-type strain (Liew et al., 2013). Insertion of the genes related to
430
acetone synthesis, in Clostridium aceticum, resulted in the production of 140 µM acetone, a non-
431
native product (Liew et al., 2013). Higher concentrations of acetate were produced by
432
Acetobacterium woodii, after insertion of genes related to CO2 fixation and acetate synthesis, in
433
the wild-type strain (Straub et al., 2014). Genetically engineered, T. onnurineus NA1(MC01),
434
showed 30-fold higher transcription of the mRNA encoding CODH, hydrogenase, and Na+/H+
435
antiporter (Kim et al., 2013). Specific activity of H2 production on CO, by MC01 was 1.8 fold
436
compared with wild type strain, while H2 production potential was boosted 3.8 fold compared
437
with wild-type strain. These developments have paved the way for desired product formation
438
from industrial waste gases by the genetic modification of existing acetogens. However, this
439
approach is quite time and labor intensive and requires comprehensive metabolic information.
440
An extensive research work is required to develop accurate genome-scale metabolic models,
441
preferably models incorporating regulatory mechanisms (Lee et al., 2012a). General metabolic
442
engineering tools that can be employed to engineer any strain of interest are also desired.
443
Long term adaptation is recently reported as an effective method to; understand the
444
mechanisms of molecular evolution, and to obtain desired features in the microbial strains, such
445
as; growth on the desired substrates, and increase in nutrients and environmental stress resistance
446
(Dragosits & Mattanovich, 2013). Clostridium thermoaceticum growth on heterotrophic
447
substrate (i.e., saccharide) was shifted to autotrophic growth (100% CO or H2/CO2), to show
448
establishment of the acetyl-CoA pathway by adaptation (Kerby & Zeikus, 1983). Pre-adaptation
449
of C. ragsdalei on producer gas showed improvement in tolerance to syngas impurities. The pre-
450
adapted strain showed 22% higher final cell mass concentration, and 1.9 and 2.8 fold enhanced
451
ethanol productivity, using producer gas as substrate (Ramachandriya et al., 2013).
452
5.2 Bioprocess design
453
Poor mass transfer of CO and H2 is a key bottle neck in the scale-up of syngas
454
fermentation technology. The problem has been realized and research has been conducted to
455
investigate various reactor configurations to support high mass transfer rates. The last decade has
456
witnessed a paradigm shift in research focus from conventional agitation-based reactors (Table
457
3a) to membrane based reactors (Table 4). Membrane-based reactors have outcompeted
458
conventional reactors in terms of GL-MT and have significant economic advantages compared
459
with agitation-based reactors. Power consumption, which is based on methods to increase GL-
460
MT and the scaleup issues of various reactor configurations, are summarized in Table 5.
461
In addition to many advantages, the application of HFMBR in real fermentation facilities
462
is hindered by several factors. Yasin et al. (2014) highlighted the key research perspectives for
463
using HFMBR for high GL-MT applications. Challenges with HFMBR starts with the selection
464
of proper membrane materials. So for the research conducted in syngas fermentation using HFM
465
has utilized the hollow fibers that were primarily made for waste water treatment applications.
466
Thermal stability and durability of these hollow fibers for GL-MT need to be assessed. The
467
commercial fabrication of HFM for syngas fermentation has business potential, and the
468
fabrication of HFM specifically designed to achieve high GL-MT of syngas components would
469
offer better mass transfer and durability. Submerged HFMBR configurations with dead ends are
470
economically more viable. However, the effect of bio-fouling and short gas retention times
471
require careful consideration before commercial applications. HFMs have shown the highest GL-
472
MT efficiency, and future research should be focused on their practicality under real
473
fermentation conditions. Long term trials with actual fermentation broths are desired to assess
474
the membrane and module stability and fouling factor, and comparing the performance of
475
suspended growth reactors with biofilm reactors will be interesting.
476
CO is an inhibitory substrate; therefore, it is desired to find intrinsic kinetics of the
477
microorganism that would be used in the syngas conversion process. An ideal bioreactor should
478
match the intrinsic requirement of the microorganism without substrate limitation or inhibition.
479
The desired mass transfer rate to achieve optimum substrate levels in bioreactors is achieved by
480
controlling kLa or the driving force for the mass transfer (C*− CL) (equation 4). Achieving a
481
high driving force of the gas in a bioreactor is difficult; therefore, studies have historically
482
focussed on obtaining a high kLa. Overall, the mass transfer rates to the bioreactors should be
483
sufficient to support maximum cell growth (equation 7); while an ideal bioreactor should be
484
operated in accordance with equation 9.
485 486
The use of high cell density cultures to achieve high productivities should also be reevaluated in economics terms. The current approaches for using high cell density cultures result
487
in the excessive loss of the nutrients and also require extra pumping costs for the addition of
488
fresh medium and the removal of permeate.
489
5.3. Product separation
490
A successful biorefinery require a hybrid continuous fermentation system (HCFS)
491
involving the in situ separation and recovery of fermentation products. The selection of an
492
optimal product separation and purification process will play a critical role in the scaleup and
493
commercialization of fermentation facilities. The fermentation of gasified syngas requires a
494
suitable process for the removal of fatty acids (e.g., formic and acetic acids) and VOC (ethanol,
495
butanol and isopropanol). The continuous removal of products from the fermentation broths may
496
increase the productivity of fermentation especially when the syngas-converting microbes exhibit
497
inhibition either by fatty acids or solvents. Distillation has been the dominant technology for the
498
recovery of VOCs from fermentation broths; however, product separation and recovery at a
499
smaller scale are not economical, particularly when the fermentation broths have lower
500
concentrations of the desired products. Table 6 provides the technological options that can be
501
integrated into a syngas based-biorefinery for the recovery and separation of desired products.
502
The choice of the desired separation technology depends on several factors. Economic feasibility
503
and practical viability should be assessed at various biofuel production scales before choosing
504
any technology. Membrane pervaporation appears to be a promising future technology due to the
505
simplicity of operation, ease in the scale-up and scale-down and relatively low cost. A
506
conceptual design of hybrid multiple membrane modules installed in an HFMBR system is
507
presented in Figure 2. The issue of low residence time associated with stand-alone HFMBR
508
configurations may be addressed by using multiple membrane modules. In addition, the possible
509
un-homogenized conditions at high cell concentrations may be avoided by media circulation,
510
which is primarily conduced for product separation. However, the success of membrane
511
pervaporation highly depends upon the development of ideal membranes for multiple products
512
separation. The manufacturing and use of highly selective membranes for specific products may
513
allow a single vessel product recovery, which reduce the cost for infra-structure and downstream
514
processing.
515
6. Conclusions
516
The vision for the sustainable production of biofuels and chemicals can be realized by the
517
successful scale-up of syngas fermentation. Overall, the challenges with this technology are
518
highlighted together with the potential solutions by considering all process components. Special
519
focus is given to the bioprocess design and HFMBRs are proposed to resolve the issues of GL-
520
MT and the kinetic limitations. A hybrid bioprocess that combines the upstream, midstream and
521
downstream technologies by the application of synthetic biology, metabolic engineering,
522
bioprocess engineering and membrane technology is expected to pave the way for economical
523
and efficient utilization of organic matter from fossils and renewable resources.
524
Acknowledgements
525
We would like to thank Engr. Abdul Waheed Bhutto (Dawood University, Karachi) and Dr.
526
Aqeel Ahmed Bazmi (COMSATS University, Lahore) for their valuable comments. This work
527
was supported by the New & Renewable Energy Core Technology Program of the Korea
528
Institute of Energy Technology Evaluation and Planning (KETEP) granted financial resource
529
from the Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy (No. 20133030000090), and the Development of
530
Biohydrogen Production Technology Using the Hyperthermophilic Archaea Program of the
531
Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries in the Republic of Korea.
532
References
533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574
1. Abubackar, H.N., Veiga, M.C., Kennes, C., 2011. Biological conversion of carbon monoxide: rich syngas or waste gases to bioethanol. Biofuels, Bioprod. Biorefin. 5, 93-114. 2. Andrews, J.F., 1968. A mathematical model for the continuous culture of microorganisms utilizing inhibitory substrates. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 10, 707-723. 3. Bredwell, M.D., Srivastava, P., Worden, R.M., 1999. Reactor design issues for synthesis-gas fermentations. Biotechnol. Prog. 15, 834-844. 4. Bredwell, M.D., Telgenhoff, M.D., Barnard, S., Worden, R.M., 1997. Effect of surfactants on carbon monoxide fermentations by Butyribacterium methylotrophicum. Appl. Biochem. Biotechnol. 63-65, 637-647. 5. Buonomenna, M.G., 2013. Membrane processes for a sustainable industrial growth. RSC Adv. 3, 5694-5740. 6. Chang, I.S., Kim, B.H., Lovitt, R.W., Bang, J.S., 2001. Effect of CO partial pressure on cellrecycled continuous CO fermentation by Eubacterium limosum KIST612. Process Biochem. 37, 411-421. 7. Cotter, J.L., Chinn, M.S., Grunden, A.M., 2009. Influence of process parameters on growth of Clostridium ljungdahlii and Clostridium autoethanogenum on synthesis gas. Enzyme Microb. Technol. 44, 281-288. 8. Cowger, J.P., Klasson, K.T., Ackerson, M.D., Clausen, E., Caddy, J.L., 1992. Mass-transfer and kinetic aspects in continuous bioreactors using Rhodospirillum rubrum. Appl. Biochem. Biotechnol. 34-35, 613-624. 9. Daniell, J., Köpke, M., Simpson, S., 2012. Commercial biomass syngas fermentation. Energies. 5, 5372-5417. 10. Davis, R.Z. 2010. Design and scale-up of production scale stirred tank fermentors. in: Utah State University, Vol. MS. 11. De Vrije, T., Budde, M., van der Wal, H., Claassen, P.A.M., López-Contreras, A.M., 2013. “In situ” removal of isopropanol, butanol and ethanol from fermentation broth by gas stripping. Bioresour. Technol. 137, 153-159. 12. Demirbas, A., 2007. Progress and recent trends in biofuels. Prog. Energy Combust. Sci. 33, 1-18. 13. Demirel, Y. 2012. Energy and energy types. in: Energy, Springer London, pp. 27-70. 14. Demler, M., Weuster-Botz, D., 2011. Reaction engineering analysis of hydrogenotrophic production of acetic acid by Acetobacterium woodii. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 108, 470-474. 15. Doran, P.M. 1995. Bioprocess enginering principles. Academic press. 16. Dragosits, M., Mattanovich, D., 2013. Adaptive laboratory evolution - principles and applications for biotechnology. Microb. Cell Fact. 12, 64. 17. Evans, D.J., 2005. Chemistry relating to the nickel enzymes CODH and ACS. Coord. Chem. Rev. 249, 1582-1595. 18. Girard, P., Fallot, A., 2006. Review of existing and emerging technologies for the production of biofuels in developing countries. Energy Sustain. Dev. 10, 92-108. 19. Haddad, M., Cimpoia, R., Guiot, S.R., 2014. Performance of Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans in a gas-lift reactor for syngas upgrading into hydrogen. Int. J. Hydrogen Energ. 39, 2543-2548.
575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618
20. Heiskanen, H., Virkajärvi, I., Viikari, L., 2007. The effect of syngas composition on the growth and product formation of Butyribacterium methylotrophicum. Enzyme Microb.Technol. 41, 362-367. 21. Henstra, A.M., Sipma, J., Rinzema, A., Stams, A.J.M., 2007. Microbiology of synthesis gas fermentation for biofuel production. Curr. Opin. in Biotechnol. 18, 200-206. 22. Jung, G.Y., Kim, J.R., Park, J.-Y., Park, S., 2002. Hydrogen production by a new chemoheterotrophic bacterium Citrobacter sp. Y19. Int. J. Hydrogen Energ. 27, 601-610. 23. Kapic, A., Jones, S.T., Heindel, T.J., 2006. Carbon monoxide mass transfer in a syngas mixture. Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. 45, 9150-9155. 24. Kerby, R., Zeikus, J.G., 1983. Growth of Clostridium thermoaceticum on H2/CO2 or CO as energy source. Curr. Microbiol. 8, 27-30. 25. Kim, D., Chang, I.S., 2009. Electricity generation from synthesis gas by microbial processes: CO fermentation and microbial fuel cell technology. Bioresour. Technol. 100, 45274530. 26. Kim, J., Kim, K., Ye, H., Lee, E., Shin, C., McCarty, P.L., Bae, J., 2010a. Anaerobic fluidized bed membrane bioreactor for wastewater treatment. Environ. Sci. Technol. 45, 576-581. 27. Kim, M.-S., Bae, S.S., Kim, Y.J., Kim, T.W., Lim, J.K., Lee, S.H., Choi, A.R., Jeon, J.H., Lee, J.-H., Lee, H.S., Kang, S.G., 2013. CO-dependent H2 production by genetically engineered Thermococcus onnurineus NA1. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 79, 2048-2053. 28. Kim, Y.J., Lee, H.S., Kim, E.S., Bae, S.S., Lim, J.K., Matsumi, R., Lebedinsky, A.V., Sokolova, T.G., Kozhevnikova, D.A., Cha, S.-S., Kim, S.-J., Kwon, K.K., Imanaka, T., Atomi, H., Bonch-Osmolovskaya, E.A., Lee, J.-H., Kang, S.G., 2010b. Formate-driven growth coupled with H2 production. Nature. 467, 352-355. 29. Kita, A., Iwasaki, Y., Sakai, S., Okuto, S., Takaoka, K., Suzuki, T., Yano, S., Sawayama, S., Tajima, T., Kato, J., Nishio, N., Murakami, K., Nakashimada, Y., 2013. Development of genetic transformation and heterologous expression system in carboxydotrophic thermophilic acetogen Moorella thermoacetica. J. Biosci. Bioeng. 115, 347-352. 30. Klasson, K.T., Ackerson, C.M.D., Clausen, E.C., Gaddy, J.L., 1992. Biological conversion of synthesis gas into fuels. Int. J. Hydrogen Energ. 17, 281-288. 31. Klasson, K.T., Gupta, A., Clausen, E.C., Gaddy, J.L., 1993. Evaluation of mass-transfer and kinetic parameters for Rhodospirillum rubrum in a continuous stirred tank reactor. Appl. Biochem. Biotech. 39-40, 549-557. 32. Kundiyana, D.K., Huhnke, R.L., Wilkins, M.R., 2011. Effect of nutrient limitation and twostage continuous fermentor design on productivities during “Clostridium ragsdalei” syngas fermentation. Bioresour. Technol. 102, 6058-6064. 33. Kundiyana, D.K., Huhnke, R.L., Wilkins, M.R., 2010. Syngas fermentation in a 100-L pilot scale fermentor: design and process considerations. J. Biosci. Bioeng. 109, 492-498. 34. Küsel, K., Dorsch, T., Acker, G., Stackebrandt, E., Drake, H.L., 2000. Clostridium scatologenes strain SL1 isolated as an acetogenic bacterium from acidic sediments. Int. J. Syst. Evol. Micr. 50, 537-546. 35. Latif, H., Zeidan, A.A., Nielsen, A.T., Zengler, K., 2014. Trash to treasure: production of biofuels and commodity chemicals via syngas fermenting microorganisms. Curr. Opini. Biotechnol. 27, 79-87.
619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663
36. Lee, J.W., Na, D., Park, J.M., Lee, J., Choi, S., Lee, S.Y., 2012a. Systems metabolic engineering of microorganisms for natural and non-natural chemicals. Nat. Chem. Biol. 8, 536-546. 37. Lee, P.-H., Ni, S.-Q., Chang, S.-Y., Sung, S., Kim, S.-H., 2012b. Enhancement of carbon monoxide mass transfer using an innovative external hollow fiber membrane (HFM) diffuser for syngas fermentation: experimental studies and model development. Chem. Eng. J. 184, 268-277. 38. Liew, F.M., Köpke, M., Simpson, S.D. 2013. Gas fermentation for commercial biofuels production. in: Liquid, gaseous and solid biofules-conversion techniques, Edited by Fang Z., DOI: 10.5772/52164. 39. Liu, K., Atiyeh, H.K., Stevenson, B.S., Tanner, R.S., Wilkins, M.R., Huhnke, R.L., 2014. Continuous syngas fermentation for the production of ethanol, n-propanol and n-butanol. Bioresour. Technol. 151, 69-77. 40. Martin, K.J., Nerenberg, R., 2012. The membrane biofilm reactor (MBfR) for water and wastewater treatment: principles, applications, and recent developments. Bioresour. Technol. 122, 83-94. 41 Mohammadi, M., Najafpour, G.D., Younesi, H., Lahijani, P., Uzir, M.H., Mohamed, A.R., 2011. Bioconversion of synthesis gas to second generation biofuels: a review. Renew. Sust. Energ. Rev. 15, 4255-4273. 42. Mohammadi, M., Younesi, H., Najafpour, G., Mohamed, A.R., 2012. Sustainable ethanol fermentation from synthesis gas by Clostridium ljungdahlii in a continuous stirred tank bioreactor. J. Chem. Technol. Biot. 87, 837-843. 43. Munasinghe, P.C., Khanal, S.K., 2010a. Biomass-derived syngas fermentation into biofuels: opportunities and challenges. Bioresour. Technol. 101, 5013-5022. 44. Munasinghe, P.C., Khanal, S.K., 2014. Evaluation of hydrogen and carbon monoxide mass transfer and a correlation between the myoglobin-protein bioassay and gas chromatography method for carbon monoxide determination. RSC Adv. 4, 37575-37581. 45. Munasinghe, P.C., Khanal, S.K., 2012. Syngas fermentation to biofuel: evaluation of carbon monoxide mass transfer and analytical modeling using a composite hollow fiber (CHF) membrane bioreactor. Bioresour. Technol. 122, 130-136. 46. Munasinghe, P.C., Khanal, S.K., 2010b. Syngas fermentation to biofuel: evaluation of carbon monoxide mass transfer coefficient (kLa) in different reactor configurations. Biotechnol. Prog. 26, 1616-1621. 47. Nagarajan, H., Sahin, M., Nogales, J., Latif, H., Lovley, D.R., Ebrahim, A., Zengler, K., 2013. Characterizing acetogenic metabolism using a genome-scale metabolic reconstruction of Clostridium ljungdahlii. Microb. Cell Fact. 12, 1-13. 48. Orgill, J.J., Atiyeh, H.K., Devarapalli, M., Phillips, J.R., Lewis, R.S., Huhnke, R.L., 2013. A comparison of mass transfer coefficients between trickle-bed, hollow fiber membrane and stirred tank reactors. Bioresour. Technol. 133, 340-346. 49. Park, S., Yasin, M., Kim, D., Park, H.-D., Kang, C.M., Kim, D.J., Chang, I.S., 2013. Rapid enrichment of (homo)acetogenic consortia from animal feces using a high mass-transfer gas-lift reactor fed with syngas. J. Ind. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 40, 995-1003. 50. Perez, J.M., Richter, H., Loftus, S.E., Angenent, L.T., 2013. Biocatalytic reduction of shortchain carboxylic acids into their corresponding alcohols with syngas fermentation. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 110, 1066-1077.
664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709
51. Phillips, J.R., Klasson, K.T., Clausen, E.C., Gaddy, J.L., 1993. Biological production of ethanol from coal synthesis gas. Appl. Biochem. Biotechnol. 39-40, 559-571. 52. Ragsdale, S.W., 2004. Life with Carbon Monoxide. Crit. Rev. Biochem. Mol. Biol. 39, 165195. 53. Ragsdale, S.W., Pierce, E., 2008. Acetogenesis and the Wood–Ljungdahl pathway of CO2 fixation. BBA-proteins Proteom. 1784, 1873-1898. 54. Ramachandriya, K., Wilkins, M., Patil, K., 2013. Influence of switchgrass generated producer gas pre-adaptation on growth and product distribution of Clostridium ragsdalei. Biotechnol. Bioprocess Eng. 18, 1201-1209. 55. Ramaswamy, S., Huang, H., Ramarao, B. 2013. Separation and purification technologies in biorefineries. Wiley. 56. Riggs, S.S., Heindel, T.J., 2006. Measuring carbon monoxide gas-liquid mass transfer in a stirred tank reactor for syngas fermentation. Biotechnol. Prog. 22, 903-906. 57. Rittmann, B.E., MeCarty, P.L. 2005. Environmental technology: principles and applications. McGraw-Hill. 58. Robinson, C.W., Wilke, C.R., 1973. Oxygen absorption in stirred tanks: A correlation for ionic strength effects. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 15, 755-782. 59. Shen, Y., Brown, R., Wen, Z., 2014a. Enhancing mass transfer and ethanol production in syngas fermentation of Clostridium carboxidivorans P7 through a monolithic biofilm reactor. Applied Energy. 136, 68-76. 60. Shen, Y., Brown, R., Wen, Z., 2014b. Syngas fermentation of Clostridium carboxidivoran P7 in a hollow fiber membrane biofilm reactor: evaluating the mass transfer coefficient and ethanol production performance. Biochem. Eng. J. 85, 21-29. 61. Sim, J.H., Kamaruddin, A.H., Long, W.S., Najafpour, G., 2007. Clostridium aceticum-a potential organism in catalyzing carbon monoxide to acetic acid: application of response surface methodology. Enzyme Microb. Technol. 40, 1234-1243. 62. Straub, M., Demler, M., Weuster-Botz, D., Dürre, P., 2014. Selective enhancement of autotrophic acetate production with genetically modified Acetobacterium woodii. J. Biotechnol. 178, 67-72. 63. Ungerman, A.J., Heindel, T.J., 2007. Carbon monoxide mass transfer for syngas fermentation in a stirred tank reactor with dual impeller configurations. Biotechnol. Prog. 23, 613-620. 64. Vane, L.M., 2005. A review of pervaporation for product recovery from biomass fermentation processes. J. Chem. Technol. Biotechnol. 80, 603-629. 65. Vane, L.M., 2008. Separation technologies for the recovery and dehydration of alcohols from fermentation broths. Biofuels, Bioprod. Biorefin. 2, 553-588. 66. Vega, J., Holmberg, V., Clausen, E., Gaddy, J., 1988. Fermentation parameters of Peptostreptococcus productus on gaseous substrates (CO, H2/CO2). Arch. Microbiol. 151, 65-70. 67. Vega, J.L., Antorrena, G.M., Clausen, E.C., Gaddy, J.L., 1989a. Study of gaseous substrate fermentations: carbon monoxide conversion to acetate. 2. continuous culture. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 34, 785-793. 68. Vega, J.L., Clausen, E.C., Gaddy, J.L., 1989b. Study of gaseous substrate fermentations: carbon monoxide conversion to acetate. 1. batch culture. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 34, 774784. 69. Wang, J., Wan, W., 2009. Factors influencing fermentative hydrogen production: A review. Int. J. Hydrogen Energ. 34, 799-811.
710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731
70. Yagi, H., Yoshida, F., 1975. Enhancement factor for oxygen absorption into fermentation broth. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 17, 1083-1098. 71. Yasin, M., Park, S., Jeong, Y., Lee, E.Y., Lee, J., Chang, I.S., 2014. Effect of internal pressure and gas/liquid interface area on the CO mass transfer coefficient using hollow fibre membranes as a high mass transfer gas diffusing system for microbial syngas fermentation. Bioresour. Technol. 169, 637-643. 72. Younesi, H., Najafpour, G., Ku Ismail, K.S., Mohamed, A.R., Kamaruddin, A.H., 2008. Biohydrogen production in a continuous stirred tank bioreactor from synthesis gas by anaerobic photosynthetic bacterium: Rhodopirillum rubrum. Bioresour. Technol. 99, 2612-2619. 73. Younesi, H., Najafpour, G., Mohamed, A.R., 2005. Ethanol and acetate production from synthesis gas via fermentation processes using anaerobic bacterium, Clostridium ljungdahlii. Biochem. Eng. J. 27, 110-119. 74. Zhang, F., Ding, J., Zhang, Y., Chen, M., Ding, Z.-W., van Loosdrecht, M.C.M., Zeng, R.J., 2013. Fatty acids production from hydrogen and carbon dioxide by mixed culture in the membrane biofilm reactor. Water Res. 47, 6122-6129. 75. Zhao, Y., Haddad, M., Cimpoia, R., Liu, Z., Guiot, S.R., 2013. Performance of a Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans-immobilizing membrane reactor for syngas upgrading into hydrogen. Int. J. Hydrogen Energ. 38, 2167-2175.
732
Figure Captions
733 734
Figure 1: Dissolved CO profile with reactor height (left) and three cases of bioreactor operation (right)
735
Figure 2: Multiple membrane modules installed HFMBR system integrated with pervaporation
736 737 738 739 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755
756
757
Figure 1
758
759
Figure 2
760
Table 1: Selected syngas utilizing microorganisms Growth condition¬
Bacteria
Domain
Microorganisms
Type Isolated from
Mud
Yeast Temp. pH extract (℃ ) (g L-1)
Acetobacterium woodii
Wild
A. woodii pJIR750 THF
recombi nant
Butyribacterium methylotrophicum
Adapted Sewage sludge on CO digestor 7.3
Clostridium aceticum
Wild
Mud
7
30
2
7
30
4
Growth Parameters Substrate
Culture mode
Product
-1
OD/g L / no. of
-1
µ (h )
cells CO2-H2 = n/a –PH2 1700 Batch-STR mbar CO2-H2 =167-400 Batch-STR (mbar)
(mM)
(mM h-1)
Reference
n/a
acetate: 745.76
5.2
Yes
(Demler & Weuster-Botz, 2011)
1.2-2
0.056
acetate: 864.4
20.3
Yes
(Straub et al., 2014)
0.5
CO:CO2 = 70:30
Batch-serum vial
0.35
0.042
acetic acid: 21.6, acetic acid: 0.15, ethanol: 1.7, ethanol: 0.01, butyric acid: 4.5 butyric acid: 0.03
No
(Heiskanen et al., 2007)
2
CO:H2:Ar=78:4:18
Batch
0.8
n/a
acetate: 31.4
No
(Sim et al., 2007)
1
CO:CO2:H2:N2 =20:20:10:50
Batch
0.15
Yes
(Cotter et al., 2009)
4.5-6 37
0.5
CO:CO2:H2:N2 =20:15:5:60
ContinuousHFMBfR
1.7 (batch n/a mode)
Yes
(Shen et al., 2014b)
4-6
37
1
Batch-serum vial
1.15
0.022
Yes
(Younesi et al., 2005)
4.5
36
-
CO:CO2:H2:Ar =55:10:20:15 CO:CO2:H2:Ar =55:10:20:15
CCRS
4
n/a
Yes
(Phillips et al., 1993)
Yes
(Perez et al., 2013)
No
(Kundiyana et al., 2010)
Yes
(Chang et al., 2001)
7.18.9
37 30
Wild
Rabbit faeces 6
Clostridium Carboxidivorans P7
Wild
Agricultural lagoon
Clostridium ljungdahlii
Wild
Clostridium ljungdahlii
Wild
Clostridium ljungdahlii ER1-2
Wild
Natural water 4-5.5 35 source
0.5
CO:CO2:H2=60:5:35
Batch
OD6003
0.094
Clostridium ragsdalei (P11)
Wild
Duck pond sediment
5-6
37
-
CO:CO2:H2:N2 =20:15:5:60
Semicontinuous
1.13
n/a
Eubacterium limosum KIST612
Wild
Anaerobic digester
6.8
37
1
CO 100%
Batch-vial* Batch-BCR
1.35
0.17*
Moorella thermoacetica
Productivity
1.1
Clostridium autoethanogenum
Chicken yard waste
Con.
Whole genome sequencing
37
Wild Horse manure 7
0.5
CO2:H2= 20:80
Batch
OD660 0.18
n/a
acetate:26.9
0.32
Yes
3
CO 100%
Batch
OD660 1 n/a
acetate:58.9
0.45
Yes
0.16
0.2
acetate: 16.9
2.8
Yes
(Vega et al., 1989a)
0.106
0.1
YH2:83.3̂ acetate: 0.51 ethanol: 0.087 methanol 0.25
n/a
Yes
(Haddad et al., 2014)
0.7*
H2 : 171.3
5.71
No
(Jung et al., 2002)
n/a
acetate: 8.0
acetate:0.021
NO
(Küsel et al., 2000)
55
Moorella thermoacetica
Adapted on CO
Peptostreptococcus productus
Wild
Anaerobic digester sludge,
7-7.4 37
2
CO:CH4:CO2=63.43:20. CSTR 61 :15.96
Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans
Wild
hot spring
6.8-7 70
0.05
CO 100%
Citrobacter sp Y19
Wild
Clostridium drakei
wild
Anaerobic WW 7 sludge digester Acidic 5.8-
30
n/a
acetate: 0.93
acetate: 23.3, acetate:0.35, ethanol: 1.45 ethanol: 0.02 acetate:108.4, acetate: 1.9, ethanol:519.4 ethanol: 3.1 butanol: 6.07 acetate: 20.3, acetate: 0.21, ethanol: 13.0 ethanol: 0.14 acetate: 50.8, Acetate:0.09, ethanol:1042 ethanol:1.86 acetate: 123.27, Acetate:0.58, ethanol 135.72: ethanol:0.45 ethanol: 548.30 ethanol: 0.39 acetic acid: 80.27 acetic acid: 0.14 1-butanol: 6.34 1-butanol: 0.02 acetate: 90, acetate: 1.38 butyrate: 0.7 butyrate: 0.01
3
25-30 0.5
Batchcontinuous CO supply
Batch-Serum CO:air vial* 2* +organics=2.5:97.5 (v/v) Batch-STR H2 Batch-infusion 0.06
(Kerby & Zeikus, 1983)
Archaea
sediment
Thermococcus onnurineus Wild NA1 Thermococcus onnurineus recombi NA1 nant (MC01)
761 762
¬
6.9
Hydrothermal 6.1vent 6.2
CO
bottles
CO 100%
BatchContinuous CO supply BatchContinuous CO supply
10 80 10
0.08
acetate: 7.3
acetate: 0.019
0.43
0.31
H2 : 332.2
31.8
Yes
(Kim et al., 2013)
1.62
0.72
H2 : 1641.6
123.5
Yes
(Kim et al., 2013)
Growth conditions used in this table are specific to the referred studies. The optimum growth conditions can be found elsewhere (Abubacker et al., 2011; Liew at al., 2013; Mohammadi et al., 2011; Munasinghe & Khanal, 2010). ; (̂ % mol mol-1 CO)
763
Table 2: Leading mass balance equations Equation = − (1)
Background/application ● Fick's first law of diffusion is the basis of mass transfer in binary (gas-liquid) phases i.e., two film theory by Whitman.
= × × ∆
● Applicable when ∆ = !∆ (Henry’s law).
(2)
= × × ∆ (3) "=
∆ '* ()
=
#
= ( ∗ − ) (4)
● Overall mass transfer rate of gaseous substrate to liquid medium.
'
(5)
● RL = resistance to the mass transfer caused by the liquid film.
0 = −( )1 (6)
● Solution of equation (3) under fully homogenized conditions. ● Used to find kLa in bioreactors without considering the effect of gas and/or liquid flow rates. ● At steady state, when there is no accumulation of gas (CO) in the reactor, the overall rate of CO transfer from the bubbles should be equal to the rate of CO consumption by the cells. ● Under biotic conditions, substrate uptake rat is equivalent to specific substrate consumption times cell concentration. ● Obtained by the comparison of equations (4) and (8). ● Represent ideal case for optimum bioreactor operation in the absence of substrate limitation and inhibition. ● Expression relating the QCO with cell concentration, specific growth rate and the cell growth yield coefficient.
+)
ln .1 −
)
∗
" = 2 (7) 2 = 4 (8) ( ∗ − ) = 2 (9) 4 = μ= 6
(10)
78⁄9: 6
( ∗ − ) (11)
= =6⁄ ( ∗ − ) (12)
#
4 = −
56
78⁄9:
() A
D ' C9:
B)
μ= ) I9:
5
#
E
−
M
M
5FGH
) EFGH I9:
M
=
) I9:
M
EFGHJN
+
+
) I9:
A
+
● Replacement of μ with
>? '
>@ ?
● Rate expression for CO uptake under mass transfer controlled conditions. ● Substrate transfer rate per unit working volume of the reactor incorporating the inhibitory effect of gaseous substrate. ● Modified Monod Model (MMM) equation proposed by Andrew’s for the determination of intrinsic kinetic parameters. ● Differentiation of equations 15 and 16 leads to equations 15a and 16a which can be used as second order non-linear regression models to find Ks and Ki.
JK
5FGH
(16)
EFGH
() .B)
(14)
(15)
) I9:
+
5FGH JN
) LI) *J JK LI9: N 9:
=
(13)
) ) 6EFGH I9:
M
) I9:
)
) LI) *J JKLI9: N 9:
) 5FGH I9:
(15a)
) I9:
=
) LI ) *J JKLI9: N 9:
=
=
(
● Solution of equation (9) and (10).
+
D C9:
#
JK
EFGH
(16a)
(17)
● Relation used to find the partial pressure of CO in liquid phase in equilibrium with the gas phase.
764 765 766 767 768
Notations : a: interfacial area gas phase (m2 m-3), CA: concentration of a component A (mol m-3), C*: saturated gas concentration at equilibrium (mol m-3),
769 770
qCO: specific CO consumption rate (mol gcell-1 h-1), QCO: CO consumption rate per unit volume of broth (mol h-1 L-1), t: time, μ: specific growth rate (h-1), VL:
CL: the dissolved gas concentration (mol m-3), ∆C: concentration gradient (mol m-3), D AB: diffusivity of component A through B, which is a measure of its diffusive mobility (m2 s-1), H: Henry law constant (L atm mol -1), JA: molar flux of a component A relative to the average molal velocity of all constituents (mol m-2 s-1), kG and kL: diffusion coefficient of per unit area through the gas and liquid films respectively (m s-1), NA: mass transfer rate (mol m-3 s-1), NCO: moles of CO,
:
partial pressure of CO in the liquid phase,
:
partial pressure of CO in the gas phase, PM: particulate matter, ∆P: pressure gradient,
working volume of reactor (m3), =6⁄: growth yield coefficient (gcell produced (mol CO consumed)-1), z: distance (m) in z-direction.
771
Table 3a : Maximum k La in mechanical mixed (MM) reactors Reactor type
Hydrodynamic condition Substrate
Reference
(Klasson et al., 1993) (Bredwell et al., 1999)
CSTR ST-MBS
CO CO Syngas
Agitation speed (rpm) 700 200 300
STR
CO Syngas Syngas O2 Syngas
600 700 500 900 300
n/a n/a R. rubrum n/a SRB mixed culture
CO Syngas
200 300
B.methylotrophicum C. ljungdahlii
35.5 90.6 104 for CO & 190 for H2 154.8 292.68 72.8 114 31 for CO & 75 for H2 14.2 35 for CO
Syngas CO CO
450 150 300
R. rubrum n/a n/a
101 for CO 33.5-53.3 34.9-55.8
SpargerMM
Microorganism
kLa (h-1)
R. rubrum B.methylotrophicum SRB mixed culture
(Riggs & Heindel, 2006) (Kapic et al., 2006) (Younesi et al., 2008) (Orgill et al., 2013) (Bredwell et al., 1999)
(Munasinghe & Khanal, 2010b)
772 773
Table 3b: Maximum kLa in non-agitated membrane less reactors Reactor type
Hydrodynamic condition
kLa (h-1)
Reference
774 775
Substrate
Microorganism
776 BCR
CO CO CO CO O2 Syngas
n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a SRB MC
Syngas
R. rubrum
72 94.3 400 450 421 121 for CO & 335 for H2 55.5
Syngas CO Syngas CO
C .ljungdahlii R. rubrum R. rubrum n/a
137 38 2.1 2.5-40
CO
n/a
31.7-78.8
CO
n/a
29.5-50.4
785
GLR GLR
CO CO
n/a n/a
16.6-45.0 49.0-91.1
(combined with a single-point gas entry) 786 (combined with 20 µ m bulb diffuser)
GLR GLR GLR
CO H2 CO
n/a n/a n/a
129.6 97.2 *1.5-2
(Munasinghe & Khanal, 2014)
MlBfR TBR
(Chang et al., 2001) (Park et. al, 2013) (Shen et al., 2014a) (Orgill et al., 2013) (Bredwell et al., 1999)
777 778 779 780 781
PBR Column diffuser 20 µm bulb diffuser Sparger
(Cowger et al., 1992) (Bredwell et al., 1999) (Munasinghe & Khanal, 2010b)
782 783 784
787
790
(Haddad et al., 2014)
(MlBfR: monolithic biofilm reactor, PBR: packed bed reactor, *at 70°C, SRB: sulphate reducing bacteria, MC: mixed culture)
788 789
791
Table 4: Maximum k La in HFMBR Membrane characteristics
Configuration
As/VL (m-1)
Pressure through lumen (kPa)/Water recirculation rate (mL min-1)
Mixing reservoir (rpm)
kLa (h-1)
Reference
Membrane Material
Water interaction
Pore size (µm)
ID/OD (µm)
PVDF
Hydro Phobic (on CO)
0.1
700/1200
Stand alone1 (inside out)
62.5
37.23/Not used
Not used
155.2
(Yasin et al., 2014)
PP
Hydro Phobic (on CO)
0.04
220/300
External2 (inside out)
175
103.4/1000
200
1096.2
(Shen et al., 2014b)
PVDF
Hydro Phobic (on CO)
0.2
800/1400
Internal3 (inside out)
2250
203/1500
Not used
1.36^
(Zhao et al., 2013)
PS
Hydrophilic (on O2)
n/a
500/660
External (inside out)
4366
1-2SLPM*/80
Not used
55
(Orgill et al., 2013)
PES
Hydrophilic (on O2)
n/a
1100/1300
External (inside out)
2271
1-2SLPM*/80
Not used
23
(Orgill et al., 2013)
PDMS
Hydrophobic (on O2)
Nonporous
200/300
External (inside out)
10000
1-2SLPM*/400
Not used
1062.0
(Orgill et al., 2013)
PP
Hydro Phobic (on CO)
0.2
376/426
External (inside out)
56
114.5/670
90
385.01
(Lee et al., 2012b)
CHF
Hydro Phobic (on CO)
n/a
200/240
External (outside in)
200
206.8/1500
Not used
946.0
(Munasinghe & Khanal, 2012)
CHF
Hydro Phobic (on CO)
n/a
n/a
Internal (inside out)
200
241/500
Not used
1.08
(Munasinghe & Khanal, 2010b)
792
CHF: Composite hollow fiber, n/a: Not available , PE: Polyethylene, PP: Polypropylene, PS: Polystyrene, PES: Polyethersulfone, PDMS: Polydimethylsiloxane, PVDF: Polyvinylidenefluoride, SLPM:
793
standard liter sper minute, * It is given that gas inlet pressure was maintained between 0.7 and 4.8kPa to attain the desired flow rate, 1Submerged type HFMBR that act as a sole reactor without gas and
794
media circulation, 2CO diffuser is installed in the main reactor, 3CO diffuser is installed externally to the main reactor, ^at 70°C
795
796
797
Table 5: Economic and scaleup issues for different reactor configurations Reactor type
Ways to achieve high kLa
STR
● Increase in agitation. ● Increase in volumetric gas flow rate. ● Variation in vessel geometry.
BCR
● Substrate flow rate through pump.
TBR
● Gas flow rate.
HFMBR with media circulation
● Membrane surface area. ● Membrane material. ● Fluid (substrate and medium) circulation (flow rate) through pump. ● Substrate pressure.
Stand-alone HFMBR without media circulation
● Membrane surface area. ● Membrane material. ● Substrate pressure.
Power consumption equation ● Q = RS TURV WX Where, P= Un-gassed power consumption NP = empirical dimensionless power number n=number of impellers ρ= liquid density N=Agitation speed d= diameter of impeller (Davis, 2010). ● Pumping is required for fluid (gas or liquid) circulation in BCR, TBR and HFMBR with media circulation YZ[ Q= \]]] Where, P= required pumping power in kw ^= Specific weight of the fluid = ρ * g (N m-3) Q=fluid recycle rate (m3 s-1) h= Pressure head loss through the system (m) (Kim et al., 2010a).
● No pumping and agitation are required.
Economics
Scaleup issues
● A linear increase in kLa is possible by increasing the impeller speed. ● The power required for a STR is proportional to the cube of impeller speed, thus a linear increase in mass transfer will cause cubic increase in power consumption.
● Increase in gas flow rates cause the reduction in gas utilization due to small retention times in liquid which leads to reduced conversion efficiencies. ● Not suitable for shear sensitive microorganisms.
● About a linear increase in k La is possible by increasing the substrate flow rates. ● Power consumption increases linearly with gas flow rates. ● kLa mainly depends upon the gas flow rate (Orgill et al., 2013). ● A linear increase in power consumption for a linear increase in gas or liquid flow rates.
● Tall reactors shell will be required to achieve 100% substrate conversion in the fermentation medium. ● Maintaining the homogeneity may be difficult at higher cell concentrations. ● Complex fluid dynamics. ● Higher gas flow rates yields to lower retention times, substrate loss and lower productivities.
● kLa can be increased by increasing the membrane surface area, inlet gas flow rates and liquid media flow rates. (Lee et al., 2012b; Orgill et al., 2013; Shen et al., 2014b). ● Power consumption increases linearly with increase in flow rates of substrate gas and fermentation medium. ● No additional power is required for fluid circulation. Substrate gas can be supplied directly through pressurized gas cylinders (Yasin et al., 2014).
● Unavailability of commercial hollow fiber membranes for mass transfer applications. ● Additional power consumption through liquid media circulation. ● Possible cell washout due to medium circulation at higher velocities.
● Lower residence times of substrate gas in the fermentation medium which eventually leads to reduced productivities. ● Possibility of high amount of waste gas productions. ● Maintaining homogeneity may be difficult at higher cell concentrations.
798
Table 6: Technological options for product recovery and separation in syngas fermentation. Extracted from (Ramaswamy et al., 2013; Vane, 2008) Technology
Working principle/ Application area ● Cause the separation of different components from feed stream based on differences in their boiling points. ● Can be used for solvent recovery.
Advantages
Limitations
● Offer ≥90% alcohol recovery. ● Easy to scaleup. ● Enough energy efficiency at moderate feed concentrations (>4 wt% ethanol).
Gas stripping
● The VOC produced during fermentation can be stripped by gases and then condensed to leave the concentrated solvent solutions. ● Can be used for solvent recovery.
Liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) or Solvent extraction
● Solvents are separated based on differences in their solubility in extractants and the aqueous phase for separation. ● Can be used for the recovery of solvents and fatty acids.
● Can selectively remove the desired product. ● Do not harm any microorganism. ● Possible to use an undesired fermentation byproduct (CO2) as stripping gas. ● In-situ product recovery. ● Well understood mechanism. ● Well-established chemical operation.
● Scale down is difficult. ● Require costly product dehydration. ● High operating temperature is harmful for many microbes. ● Inadequate in the presence of azeotropes (e.g. water and ethanol). ● Cause excessive foaming of the fermentation broth. ● Additional step for solvent recovery. ● Useful for only large volumes of fermentation broths.
Distillation
Adsorption
Membrane Pervaporation
799
● Desired chemical compounds are transferred from liquid streams to a adsorptive materials (adsorbents). ● Can be used for recovery of solvents and fatty acids.
● Usually the solid adsorbents are stable and do not dissolve in liquid components of fermentation broth.
● Two or more miscible components are separated from a liquid stream by vaporization, based on their different affinities for membrane material and difference in diffusion rates through the membrane. ● Can be used for recovery of solvents and fatty acids.
● Required energy is much lower than distillation. ● Can be scaled down due to simplicity of operation ● Successfully applied ‘‘in situ’’ during acetone, butanol and ethanol (ABE) fermentation (de Vrije et al., 2013).
● Emulsion formation. ● Low distribution coefficients for conventional extractants. ● Highly selective solvent is required. ● Requires either high temperature or pressure, which is detrimental for active microorganisms. ● Complexity of scale-up in biorefining processes. ● Requires desorption of adsorbent. ● Possibility of undesired adsorption phenomenon in real fermentation conditions. ● Biofilm formation on the surface of adsorbing particles. ● Less selective separation. ● Possible increase in temperature due to evaporation of liquid stream. ● Require costly product dehydration. ● An ideal membrane can limit the transport of desired specie under certain scenarios (Vane, 2005).
Technical and economic viability ● Fully developed technology. ● Uneconomical at smaller scale. ● Net energy obtained from ethanol < energy required for distillation at lower ethanol concentrations in feed streams i.e., < 1 wt% (Vane, 2005). ● High separation costs for the removal of VOC from gas stream. ● High cost of the compressor when used for industrial applications. ● Well-developed infrastructure. ● Higher costs for extractants. ● Costly regeneration of extractants. ● No available infra-structure for biological conversion reactions.
Qualitative comparison
● Require low energy. ● Energy intensive regeneration of adsorbate. ● High adsorbent cost.
● Low capacity ● Low selectivity ● High fouling ● Easy operation
● Relatively immature technology. ● Low energy input. ● Energy required to evaporate and condense the undesired specie could be substantially high compared to the energy required to evaporate and condense the desired specie.
● Moderate capacity ● Moderate selectivity ● Low fouling ● Easy operation
● High capacity ● High selectivity ● No fouling ● Complex operation
● Moderate capacity ● Low selectivity ● Low fouling ● Easy operation
● High capacity ● High selectivity ● Moderate fouling ● Difficulty in operation
801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808
Highlights
• •
• • •
Rationales for syngas bioconversion are provided. Strategies to resolve kinetic and mass transfer limitations are presented. An ideal case of bioreactor operation for syngas bioconversion is proposed. Mass transfer and economic performance by various reactor configurations is compared. A conceptual design for a hybrid membrane-based syngas biorefinery is proposed.