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Degradation of phenol and benzoic acid in a three-phase fluidized-bed reactor

โœ Scribed by V. Hecht; O. Langer; W.-D. Deckwer


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
182 KB
Volume
70
Category
Article
ISSN
0006-3592

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โœฆ Synopsis


Degradation of phenol and benzoic acid was studied in a fluidized-bed reactor (liquid volume 2.17 L) under nonsterile conditions with special emphasis on maximizing the flow through the reactor and investigating reactor performance at fluctuating feeds. Reactor response to substrate pulses was investigated by applying substrate square-wave inputs at a liquid flow of 1.00 L h(-1). A twofold increase of the phenol and benzoic acid feed concentrations for 2.5 h did not lead to accumulation and breakthrough. The cells were able to survive four to fivefold increases of the feed concentration for 1 h without loss of viability, although the phenol pulse lead to phenol accumulation in the reactor. Reactor performance at constantly fluctuating loads was investigated by varying the feed concentrations using sine wave functions. No accumulation of phenol or benzoic acid was observed. Influence of induction was studied using shift experiments. After 35 days of operation (369 hydrodynamic residence times) with phenol as sole substrate (carbon source) the reactor was able to mineralize benzoic acid without any adaptation or lag phase. The capability of phenol degradation, on the other hand, was lost by most cells after only 3 days operation with benzoic acid as the sole substrate. The experiments underline the importance of induction. In order to maximize the flow through the reactor, the liquid flow was increased stepwise while the feed concentrations were reduced correspondingly, keeping the volumetric conversion rates of phenol (0.24 g L(-1) h(-1)) and benzoic acid (0.17 g L(-1) h(-1)) constant. By this means, liquid flow could be increased up to 13.32 L h(-1), which was more than 20-fold higher than the maximum liquid flow achievable in a chemostat using the same conditions.


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