Bioreactor
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A bioreactor refers to any manufactured device or system that supports a biologically active environment.[1] In one case, a bioreactor is a vessel in which a chemical process is carried out which involves organisms or biochemically active substances derived from such organisms. This process can either be aerobic or anaerobic. These bioreactors are commonly cylindrical, ranging in size from litres to cubic metres, and are often made of stainless steel.[citation needed] It may also refer to a device or system designed to grow
On the basis of mode of operation, a bioreactor may be classified as
Organisms or biochemically active substances growing in bioreactors may be submerged in liquid medium or may be anchored to the surface of a solid medium. Submerged cultures may be suspended or immobilized. Suspension bioreactors may support a wider variety of organisms, since special attachment surfaces are not needed, and can operate at a much larger scale than immobilized cultures. However, in a continuously operated process the organisms will be removed from the reactor with the effluent. Immobilization is a general term describing a wide variety of methods for cell or particle attachment or entrapment.[3] It can be applied to basically all types of biocatalysis including enzymes, cellular organelles, animal and plant cells and organs.[4][5] Immobilization is useful for continuously operated processes, since the organisms will not be removed with the reactor effluent, but is limited in scale because the microbes are only present on the surfaces of the vessel.
Large scale immobilized cell bioreactors are:
- moving media, also known as moving bed biofilm reactor (MBBR)
- packed bed
- fibrous bed
- membrane
Design
Bioreactor design is a relatively complex engineering task, which is studied in the discipline of
Fouling can harm the overall efficiency of the bioreactor, especially the heat exchangers. To avoid it, the bioreactor must be easily cleaned. Interior surfaces are typically made of stainless steel for easy cleaning and sanitation. Typically bioreactors are cleaned between batches, or are designed to reduce fouling as much as possible when operated continuously. Heat transfer is an important part of bioreactor design; small vessels can be cooled with a cooling jacket, but larger vessels may require coils or an external heat exchanger.[citation needed]
Types
Photobioreactor
A
Sewage treatment
Conventional sewage treatment utilises bioreactors to undertake the main purification processes. In some of these systems, a chemically inert medium with very high surface area is provided as a substrate for the growth of biological film. Separation of excess biological film takes place in settling tanks or cyclones. In other systems aerators supply oxygen to the sewage and biota to create activated sludge in which the biological component is freely mixed in the liquor in "flocs". In these processes, the liquid's biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) is reduced sufficiently to render the contaminated water fit for reuse. The biosolids can be collected for further processing, or dried and used as fertilizer. An extremely simple version of a sewage bioreactor is a septic tank whereby the sewage is left in situ, with or without additional media to house bacteria. In this instance, the biosludge itself is the primary host for the bacteria.[citation needed]
Bioreactors for specialized tissues
Many cells and tissues, especially mammalian ones, must have a surface or other structural support in order to grow, and agitated environments are often destructive to these cell types and tissues. Higher organisms, being auxotrophic, also require highly specialized growth media. This poses a challenge when the goal is to culture larger quantities of cells for therapeutic production purposes, and a significantly different design is needed compared to industrial bioreactors used for growing protein expression systems such as yeast and bacteria.[citation needed]
Many research groups have developed novel bioreactors for growing specialized tissues and cells on a structural scaffold, in attempt to recreate organ-like tissue structures in-vitro. Among these include tissue bioreactors that can grow heart tissue,[7][8] skeletal muscle tissue,[9] ligaments, cancer tissue models, and others. Currently, scaling production of these specialized bioreactors for industrial use remains challenging and is an active area of research.
For more information on artificial tissue culture, see tissue engineering.
Modelling
Mathematical models act as an important tool in various bio-reactor applications including wastewater treatment. These models are useful for planning efficient
Bioreactors are generally used in those industries which are concerned with food, beverages and pharmaceuticals. The emergence of biochemical engineering is of recent origin. Processing of biological materials using biological agents such as cells, enzymes or antibodies are the major pillars of biochemical engineering. Applications of biochemical engineering cover major fields of civilization such as agriculture, food and healthcare, resource recovery and fine chemicals.[citation needed]
Until now, the industries associated with biotechnology have lagged behind other industries in implementing control over the process and optimization strategies. A main drawback in biotechnological process control is the problem of measuring key physical and biochemical parameters.[10]
Operational stages in a bio-process
A bioprocess is composed mainly of three stages—upstream processing, bioreaction, and downstream processing—to convert raw material to finished product.[11]
The raw material can be of biological or non-biological origin. It is first converted to a more suitable form for processing. This is done in an upstream processing step which involves chemical hydrolysis, preparation of liquid medium, separation of particulate, air purification and many other preparatory operations.[citation needed]
After the upstream processing step, the resulting feed is transferred to one or more bioreaction stages. The biochemical reactors or bioreactors form the base of the bioreaction step. This step mainly consists of three operations, namely, production of biomass, metabolite biosynthesis and biotransformation.[citation needed]
Finally, the material produced in the bioreactor must be further processed in the downstream section to convert it into a more useful form. The downstream process mainly consists of physical separation operations which include solid liquid separation, adsorption, liquid-liquid extraction, distillation, drying etc.[12]
Specifications
A typical bioreactor consists of following parts:
Agitator – Used for the mixing of the contents of the reactor which keeps the cells in the perfect homogenous condition for better transport of nutrients and oxygen to the desired product(s).
Baffle – Used to break the vortex formation in the vessel, which is usually highly undesirable as it changes the center of gravity of the system and consumes additional power.
Sparger – In aerobic cultivation process, the purpose of the sparger is to supply adequate oxygen to the growing cells.
Jacket – The jacket provides the annular area for circulation of constant temperature of water which keeps the temperature of the bioreactor at a constant value.[13]
See also
- ATP test
- Biochemical engineering
- Biofuel from algae
- Biological hydrogen production (algae)
- Bioprocessor
- Bioreactor landfill
- Biotechnology
- Cell culture
- Chemostat
- Digester
- Electro-biochemical reactor (EBR)
- Hairy root culture
- History of biotechnology
- Hollow fiber bioreactor
- Immobilized enzyme
- Industrial biotechnology
- Moving bed biofilm reactor
- Septic tank
- Single-use bioreactor
- Tissue engineering
References
- ^ "Bioreactoes and Cultivation Systems for Cell and Tissue Culture" (PDF). eolss.net. Retrieved 12 August 2023.
- .
- S2CID 235672736.
- .
- S2CID 4673669.
- PMID 10444466.
- PMID 10404238.
- PMID 26141153.
- ^ Carlsson, Bengt (March 24, 2009). "An introduction to modeling of bioreactors" (PDF).
- ISBN 978-0-08-101103-4, retrieved 2020-12-14
- ^ Jana, AMIYA K. (2011). CHEMICAL PROCESS MODELLING AND COMPUTER SIMULATION. PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd.[page needed]
- ^ "Bioreactor- Basics".
Further reading
- Pauline M Doran, Bio-process Engineering Principles, Elsevier, 2nd ed., 2013 ISBN 978-0-12-220851-5
- Biotechnology company