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Liquid-liquid extraction by reversed micelles in biotechnological processes
Author(s) -
Beatriz Vahan Kilikian,
M. R. Bastazin,
Naomi Minami,
Elsa Gonçalves,
Anand Mohan P
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
brazilian journal of chemical engineering/brazilian journal of chemical engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.313
H-Index - 52
eISSN - 1678-4383
pISSN - 0104-6632
DOI - 10.1590/s0104-66322000000100003
Subject(s) - micelle , biomolecule , chemistry , extraction (chemistry) , pulmonary surfactant , liquid–liquid extraction , chromatography , solvent , downstream processing , solubilization , aqueous two phase system , aqueous solution , chemical engineering , organic chemistry , biochemistry , engineering
In biotechnology there is a need for new purification and concentration processes for biologically active compounds such as proteins, enzymes, nucleic acids, or cells that combine a high selectivity and biocompatibility with an easy scale-up. A liquid-liquid extraction with a reversed micellar phase might serve these purposes owing to its capacity to solubilize specific biomolecules from dilute aqueous solutions such as fermentation and cell culture media. Reversed micelles are aggregates of surfactant molecules containing an inner core of water molecules, dispersed in a continuous organic solvent medium. These reversed micelles are capable of selectively solubilizing polar compounds in an apolar solvent. This review gives an overview of liquid-liquid extraction by reversed micelles for a better understanding of this process

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