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Pilot Plant Glycerol Production with a Slow-Feed Osmophilic Yeast Fermentation
Author(s) -
D. K. Button,
J. C. Garver,
G. J. Hajny
Publication year - 1966
Publication title -
applied microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0003-6919
DOI - 10.1128/am.14.2.292-294.1966
Subject(s) - glycerol , fermentation , yeast , autolysis (biology) , chemistry , sugar , food science , biochemistry , phosphate , enzyme
A slow feed batch fermentation is described for the production of glycerol from sugar. The conversion efficiency was approximately 1 mole of glycerol produced per mole of glucose utilized after the cell growth phase. The glycerol production phase was extended several-fold by periodic glucose addition. The yeast cell count remained constant during this time as limited by phosphate, a deficiency required for an efficient glycerol fermentation. A small amount of phosphate was supplied during the extended fermentation, maintaining an active culture, by the normal autolysis of spent cells. Interfering or inhibitory by-products did not accumulate, and the osmophilic yeasts are tolerant of high glycerol concentrations. These factors combined to allow a particularly efficient fermentation well suited to product enrichment by supplying large quantities of substrate over an extended period.

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