Abstract

Fed-batch propionic and acetic acid fermentations were performed in semi-defined laboratory medium and in corn steep liquor with Propionibacterium acidipropionici strain P9. On average, over four experiments, 34.5 milligrams propionic acid and 12.8 milligrams acetic acid were obtained in about 146 h in laboratory medium with 79 milligrams glucose added over five feeding periods. The highest concentration of propionic acid, 45 milligrams, was obtained when the glucose concentration was not allowed to drop to zero. In corn steep liquor 35 milligrams propionic acid and 11 milligrams acetic acid were produced in 108 h from 59.4 milligrams total lactic acid provided as seven feedings of corn steep liquor. Extractive fed-batch fermentations were conducted in semi-defined medium using either flat-sheet-supported liquid membranes or hollow-fiber membrane extraction to remove organic acids from the culture medium. As operated during the course of the fermentation, these systems extracted 25% and 22% of the acetic acid and 36.5% and 44.5% of the propionic acid, respectively, produced in the fermentation. Total amounts of acids produced were about the same as in comparable nonextractive fermentations: 30-37 milligrams propionic acid and 13 milligrams acetic acid were produced in 150 h. Limitations on acid production can be attributed to limited substrate feed, not to failure of the extraction system.

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