## Abstract The use of another air operated extreme pressure hydraulic pump fitted with either a needle valve or a simple microbore tube is described, together with the figures obtained for the soluble protein released from suspensions of commercially obtained baker's yeast (__Saccharomyces cerevis
On the mechanism of microbial cell disruption in high-pressure homogenisation
β Scribed by Andrew R. Kleinig; Anton P.J. Middelberg
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 232 KB
- Volume
- 53
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0009-2509
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β¦ Synopsis
The tensions produced in the wall of a rigid, thin-walled, liquid-filled sphere as it moves with an axisymmetric straining flow are examined. This problem has not been previously addressed. A generalised correlation for the maximum wall tension, expressed in dimensionless form as a Weber number (ΒΌe), is developed in terms of the acceleration number (Ac) and Reynolds number (Re) of the straining flow. At low Reynolds number ΒΌe is dominated by viscous forces, while inertial forces due to internal pressure gradients caused by sphere acceleration dominate at higher Re. The generalised correlation has been used to examine the case of a typical yeast cell (a thin-walled, liquid-filled sphere) passing through a typical high-pressure homogeniser (a straining-flow device). At 56 MPa homogenising pressure, a 6 m yeast cell experiences tensions in the inertially dominated regime (Re"100). The correlation gives ΒΌe"0.206, corresponding to a maximum wall tension of 8 Nm. This is equivalent to an applied compressive force of 150 N and compares favourably with the force required to break yeast cells under compressive micromanipulation (40-90 N). Inertial forces may therefore be an important and previously unrecognised mechanism of microbial cell disruption during high-pressure homogenisation. Further work is required to examine the likelihood of cell deformation in the high-strain-rate short-residence-time environment of the homogeniser, and the effect that such deformation may have on the contribution of inertial forces to disruption.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The disintegration of baker's yeast (__Saccharomyces cerevisiae__) by a high pressure homogenizer, to a pressure of 25,000 psi. (172.37 MNm^β2^) is described, together with details of the methods of measurement used to obtain information on the valve movement and pressure transients. Th