Title of article
Effects of Added Yeast on Protein Transmission and Flux in Cross-Flow Membrane Microfiltration
Author/Authors
Davis، Robert H. نويسنده , , Kuberkar، Vinod T. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
-471
From page
472
To page
0
Abstract
Microfiltration membranes may be used to separate valuable proteins from suspensions containing cells or cell debris. Although a clean microfiltration membrane allows for complete protein transmission and high flux, both of these quantities decline in time due to membrane fouling. Using bovine serum albumin (BSA) as a model protein, flux and protein transmission during cross-flow microfiltration were studied with and without added yeast cells. Cross-flow microfiltration of BSA-only solutions results in a BSA fouling layer with low permeability forming on the membrane surface. Due to this layer, the long-term BSA transmission is typically only 25-40%. In contrast, during microfiltration of yeast-BSA mixtures, the yeast forms a cake layer on the membrane surface. The yeast cake acts as a dynamic or secondary membrane, allowing BSA monomers to pass through but preventing protein aggregates from fouling the membrane. The result is slower flux decline and higher long-term BSA transmission of typically 60-90%. For filtration of yeast- BSA mixtures at low yeast concentrations (5 g/L), the protein transmission remains high, but the recovery may be lower due to reduced flux.
Keywords
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Journal title
BIOTECHNOLOGY PROGRESS
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
BIOTECHNOLOGY PROGRESS
Record number
5250
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