## Abstract A new solid support membrane aerated biofilm reactor was designed for the synthesis of enantiopure (__S__)βstyrene oxide utilizing __Pseudomonas__ sp. strain VLB120ΞC growing in a biofilm as biocatalyst. In analogy to traditional packed bed systems, maximizing the volumetric oxygen mass
Development of pure culture biofilms of P. putida on solid supports
β Scribed by Gina S. Shrove; Ronald H. Olsen; Timothy M. Vogel
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 668 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3592
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Pseudomonas putida biofilms were developed on and biofilm accumulation rate data were obtained for the following two classes of support materials: charged surfaces and noncharged hydrophobic and hydrophilic surfaces. The effects of surface roughness and porosity on the rate of microbial attachment were also examined.
Materials bearing a net positive or negative surface charge supported the greatest biofilm accumulation and the highest biofilm accumulation rate. Uncharged hydrophobic materials achieved the next greatest biofilm accumulation, averaging approximately 50% of the total biomass which was accumulated on the charged surface materials after 16 days. Uncharged hydrophilic materials supported very little biofilm development. In general, biofilm accumulation increased with decreased surface roughness. The effect of pore size on biofilm accumulation was not conclusive.
The biofilm accumulation kinetics showed an exponential accumulation rate for the charged surfaces and an approximately linear accumulation rate for the hydrophobic materials. This difference in accumulation kinetics is consistent with proposed differences in the physicochemical mechanism governing attachment to these two types of surface materials.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
By using mass spectrometry as an analytical tool to characterise substituted, cross-linked polystyrene resins, it is possible to directly monitor the progress of the solid-phase reactions performed on these resins without prior cleavage of the resin-bound molecules. Therefore, this is a true on-resi
A new aminoethyl-polystyrene linker, stable at low concentrations of TFA, has been developed for the solid phase synthesis of peptide amides. The described linker is stable under conditions which remove Bu(t) protecting groups (30-50% TFA in DCM) and the desired product can be finally cleaved off th