Abstract

Quantitative balances have been made for sugar and oxygen uptake rates during citric acid accumulation by Aspergillus niger: during the first phase of citric acid accumulation (up to 130 h) more sugar is taken up than the production of biomass, CO2 and citric acid account for. In contrast, during later phases of fermentation more citric acid, CO2 and biomass are formed than sugar uptake would theoretically allow. A similar pattern is obtained for oxygen uptake, where less uptake occurs during the early phase of fermentation than needed for complete balance, and the reverse is observed during the late stage of fermentation. It could subsequently be shown that this is caused by the intermediate accumulation and partial re-consumption of a number of polyhydric alcohols (glycerol, arabitol, erythritol and mannitol) during citric acid fermentation.

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