Syngas fermentation for producing biofuels and other products suffers from mass transfer limitations due to low CO and H solubility in liquid medium. Therefore, it is critical to characterize mass transfer rates of these gases to guide bioreactor design and optimization. This work presents a novel technique to measure the volumetric mass transfer coefficients (ka) for H and CO using gas chromatography in a non-porous hollow fiber reactor (HFR). The largest measured ka for H and CO were 840 and 420 h, respectively. A model was developed to predict ka for H and CO that agreed well with experimental data. This study is the first to measure, compare, and model both H and CO mass transfer coefficients in an HFR. Based on model predictions, HFRs have the potential to be a reactor of choice for syngas fermentation as a result of high mass transfer that can support high cell densities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2018.12.092 | DOI Listing |
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