𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Scale-up of bioreactors for fermentation of mammalian cell cultures with special reference to oxygen supply and microcarrier mixing

✍ Scribed by Dipl.-Ing. Jürgen Vorlop; Dr.-Ing. Jürgen Lehmann


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1988
Tongue
English
Weight
631 KB
Volume
11
Category
Article
ISSN
0930-7516

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


The increasing demand for products from mammalian cells has prompted the authors to develop a new type of bioreactor. Its significant features include the supply of oxygen, homogeneous distribution of microcarrier suspensions and process control. Media with high protein contents, required for mammalian cell cultures, tend to generate foam. This causes the flotation of solid particles. The reactor was equipped with a system of porous hydrophobic Accurel hollow fibre membranes in order to prevent the formation of bubbles. The membrane is coiled in the form of a basket, or fixed on several carriers. If the liquid pressure is higher than that of the gas phase inside the membrane, a bubble-free oxygen supply to the culture broth can be achieved. The problem of axial mixing of microcarrier suspensions was solved by the use of a spiral agitator, attached underneath the aeration system at the bottom of the reactor. The combined aeration and mixing system, which is driven by an eccentric motor, undergoes a tumbling motion. Sufficiently homogeneous suspensions are produced in this system at low membrane velocities, i.e. in presence of low shear forces.