The stability of expanded bed adsorption systems (EBA) was studied in biomass containing culture broth by residence time distribution (RTD) experiments, using pulse inputs of fluorescent molecules as tracers. Different commercial adsorbents (Streamline DEAE, SP, Phenyl, Chelating, and AC) were teste
The influence of biomass on the hydrodynamic behavior and stability of expanded beds
✍ Scribed by Dong-Qiang Lin; Jörg Thömmes; Maria-Regina Kula; Jürgen J. Hubbuch
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 286 KB
- Volume
- 87
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3592
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Expanded bed adsorption is an innovative chromatographic technology that allows the introduction of particle‐containing feedstock without the risk of blocking the bed. Provided a perfectly classified fluidized bed (termed expanded bed) is formed in the crude feedstock and the biomass is not influencing protein transport towards the adsorbent surface, a sorption performance comparable to packed beds is found. The influence of biomass on the hydrodynamic stability of expanded beds is essential and was investigated systematically in this article. Residence‐time distribution analyses were performed using model systems and a yeast suspension under various fluid‐phase conditions. It is demonstrated that three factors (biomass/adsorbent interactions, biomass concentration, and flow rate) play an interdependent role disturbing the classified fluidization of an expanded bed. A clear correlation between the degree of aggregative fluidization—obtained by PDE modeling of RTD data—and the expansion behavior of the fluidized bed has been found. Thus, combining three analytical methods, namely cell transmission index analysis, expansion analysis, and RTD analysis provides a solid base for understanding and control of the fluidization behavior and thus further process design during the initial phase of process development. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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## Abstract Expanded bed adsorption (EBA) is an integrative step in downstream processing allowing the direct capture of target proteins from cell‐containing feedstocks. Extensive co‐adsorption of biomass, however, may hamper the application of this technique. The latter is especially observed at a